of companies who are freemen of the city. When assembled in their
 ‘common hall” they perform certain duties which must originally have
 belonged to the whole body of the citizens, and nominate two aldermen
 every year for the office of Lord Mayor, one of the two being chosen by
 the court of aldermen.
 
It would be possible to prolong this chapter considerably by
 tracing the history of all the subordinate members of the Lord Mayor's
 staff; but I have said enough, I think, to show that, whether the
 corporation had a Roman origin or not, it is easier and safer to derive
 it from the ordinary constitution of an Anglo-Saxon shire, and until
 some direct proof has been adduced to the contrary, we shall hardly
 go wrong in accepting a derivation which accounts for all the facts of
 the case in an easy and natural manner. Of the grants to the citizens
 of the county of Middlesex and the village of Southwark, I have spoken
 elsewhere. London has been lately deprived of Middlesex, but still
 holds Southwark, as Bridge Ward Without.
 
Two or three questions are often asked as to the position and title
 of the Lord Mayor,
 and very absurd
 answers are some¬
 times given to them.
 Without adducing
 authorities we may
 briefly say that the
 "Lord Mayor has
 been a " Lord” ever
 since such a title
 has been in use: that