to, 140 Murray (Dr. J. H. H.) on "From pillar to post,” 528 i Norden (John), his 'Speculum Britanniæ,' 12, 75, 193 Horse-pew: horse-block, 27 Norfolk, William of Wykebam and, 130 Photography, 367, 450 Norman (P.) on Christ's Hospital, 310 Photo-lithograph, 447 Norman inscriptions in Yorkshire, 16 Phrenesiac, 447 Norris (J. A.) on Oxford matriculations, 290 Pickeridge : Puckeridge, 367 Northampton, Royal Oak Day observance at, 31 Piece-broker, 367 Northamptonshire, Heralds' visitations, 1681, 530 Pig : swine : bog, 407 Northamptonshire dialect, 172 Ply, 110 North Midland on lonning, 29 Muses, Academy of the, 54, 177, 233 Splitting fields of ice, 513 Museum Minervæ, Covent Garden, C. 1626, 54 "That same," 515 Music, footfalls and, 161 Norway, Haakon VII., King of, 466 *Notes and Queries,' three generations contributors Muswell Bill, also called Pinsepall Hill, 77 Mutations, Welsh, 286 Nothe, the, Weymouth, its derivation, 169 N. (A.) on authors of quotations wanted, 68 Nouns and verbs differently pronounced, 64 Gibbets, 296, 315 Numismatic guide wanted, 288, 375 N. (A. A.) on Romanoff and Stuart pedigree, 108 Nursery rimes: Pop goes the weasel, 54, 209 N. (F.) on · Villikins and his Dinah,' 188 Nuttall (J. R.) on Ythancæster, Essex, 90 Nutting and the Devil's nutbag, 265, 358, 396 0. (B. I.) on black images of the Madonna, 305 Nadgairs, its meaning, 49, 213 0. (S. W.) on Sir William De Lancey, 409 Oakapple Day observances, 30, 132 Oates (J.) on St. Paulinus and the Swale, 168 Obituaries :- heels, early mention of the punishment, 465 Butler (Dr. James Davie), 480 sigpal at Trafalgar, 321, 370, 411, 471, 533 ; his Foster (Joseph), 199 Marsball (George William), 258 Vane (Rev. and Hon. Gilbert Holles Farrer), 100 Officers, general, c. 1830, 107 Nelson (Thomas Horatio), 441 Officers of State in Ireland, 149, 214, 314 Nolson Column, its dinnensions, 175 O'Hagan (Mr. Justice), bis acrostic on Jack and Nelson panoramas, 365 Jill, 153 Nelson poems, 186, 329, 407, 450 Oldenbuck (Aldobrand) on William Miller's engrav. Nelson recollections, 322 ing8, 437 Nelsoniana, 445 Oliver (A.) on Dickensian London, 35 Olorenshaw family, 66 Omar Khayyam, FitzGerald's first edition, 1859, New v. old style in chronology, 173 105 ; bibliography, 249 New England, 1652, funds for preaching in, 329 Ondatra, etymology of the word, 406 New English Dictionary.' See Historical English Onlooker on Sarah Curran and Robert Emmet, 310 Dictionary. Organ-builder, early, at Oxford, 183 Newcome (W. F.) on 'The Arms of Abraham,' 409 Oriental on The Eve of St. Agnes,' 449 Newland (Sir Abraham) and Newlands, Chalfont Ormskirk Church, Lancashire, its two steeples, 415 St. Peter, 148, 213, 276, 457 Ostermayer (Jeban), sixteenth century musician, 287 Newspaper leading articles, their three paragraphs, Owen (D.) on coop, to trap, 358 128 Puggle, 486 Hyphens after street names, 515 Oxford University : foundation of Magdalen College Nield (J.) on author of Whitefriars,' 447 and School, 21, 101, 154, 182, 244, 364 ; of Corpus Nile, Pocock's paintings of the battle, 468 Christi College, 23; matriculations at, 290 Matthew (Roger), vicar of Bloxbam, 1605-57, 488 6 6 P. on “Dying beyond my means," 127 Passive resister, his literary history, 508 P. (E. A.) on Westminster Hall interior, 148 Patrick (A.) on moon and hair-cutting. 116 P. (F.) on Paul family, 49 Paul (George), lieutenant, 1783, 49, 212 P. (G. T.) on prisons in Paris during the Revolution, Paules fete, use of the phrase, 435, 493 394 Paunches, a kind of silk, 366 P. (J. C.) on Looping the loop, 333 Peach (H. H.) on Kynaston's translation of Chaucer, P. (M.) on bird in the breast, 448 109 Duelling in Germany, 388 Peachey (G. C.) on touching for the king's evil, 287 Protestant, 427 Peacock (E.) on · Bathilda,' 93 Screaming skull, 194 Beating the bounds, 31 P. (N. P.) on Nelson's patent of peerage, 365 England's lack of noblesse, 157 P. (R. S. V.) on tinterero, 267 Flies in coffin, 386 P. (W. H. W.) on quotations wanted, 127 Incledon: Cooke, 92 P. (W. M.) on Civil War earthworks, 453 • Missal, The,' 34 Cole (W.), Cambridge antiquary, 495 Pigmies and cranes, 417 Rain caught on Holy Thursday, 447 Sea walls, their repair, 187 Suicides buried in open fields, 397 Thornbury on the Civil War, 148 Worfield churchwardens' accounts, 416 Besant on Dr. Watts, 38 Yorkshire dialect, 170, 190 Cheshire words, 332 Peacock (Janet L.) on Lincolnshire death folk-lore, 465 Cromwell swords, 288 Peacock (M. H.) on Cumberland dialect, 294 Detached belfries, 290 Pigmies and cranes, 356 Footpaths, 125 Prisoner suckled by his daughter, 353 Gibbots, 296 Pearse (H, W.) on Pearse family, 189 Pearse family, 189 Peers, foreign, directory of, 428 * Light of the World,' 131 Peet (W. H.) on George I1I.'s daughters, 236 Olorensbaw family, 66 Yorke (Eliot), 537 Robinson Crusoe, 357 Peignot (Gabriel), French bibliographer, his works, 521 Royal Oak Day, 30 Pelfry, used by Dr. Johnson, 97 Rushbearing, 216 Pemberton (H.), Jun., on Bacon's cipher, 188 Screaming skull, 331 Penhallow (John), of Clifford's Inn, 507 Spanish lady's love for an Englishman, 153 Pennethorne (Sir James) and 'The Saturday Review,' "Tertias of foot," 12 506 • Veni, Creator,' 137 Penny (F.) on hickery.puckery, 232 Yorkshire dialect, 170 Punch, the beverage, 531 Palestine, its soil placed in Jewish coffins, 113 Vaughan, Edward, 309 Palindrome: Sator arepo, 35, 175 Penny (F. P.) on club cup, 327 Penteus or Punteus (Jobo), c. 1700, 189 Perreau (Robert), his trial, 186 “Famous” Chelsea, 434 Perrywhimptering, use of the word, 127 Leech (John), 107 Perthshire on Robertson of Struan, 150 Pig : swine: hog, 449 Peter-corn, origin of the custom, 350, 397 Shakespeariana, 443 Peters (Rev. M. W.), bis picture of 'Te Fortune. Trafalgar, 431 Teller,' 390 Panopticon mentioned by Lamb, 127, 215, 297 Petherick (E. A.) on Lawson's 'New Guinea,' 456 Panoramas, Nelson, 365 Nelson's signal, 471 Philippina : philopona, its name, 254 Phoorea, ghost-word, 105 Photography, origin of the term, 367, 435, 450, 490 Parish records, neglected, 186, 255 Photo-lithograph, use before 1870, 447 Parker (Archbishop), his consecration and "suffragan" Phrenesiac, word in Waverley,' 447 bishops, 430 Piccadilly, Egyptian Hall, its bistory, 37 Parker family, 15, 94 Piccaninny, etymology of the word, 27, 128, 255, 317 Parks (W. Å.) on Severance as a proper name, 148 Pickeridge: puckeridge, origin of the words, 367, 495 Parliamentary whips, 507 Piokering (J. E. L.) on “Pop goes the weasel,” 54 Parliaments, dates of prorogation, 145 Pickford (J.) on Cheshire words, 332 Parry (T. B.) on William Shelley, 492 Coop, to trap, 358 Parsloes Hall, Essex, its bistory, 34 Cricket : pictures and engravings, 132, 238 Pickford (J.) on Sarah Curran and Robert Emmet, 111 Pitt (Col.), 1711, bis wife, 206, 333, 375 Pitt-Lewis (G.) on 'Love's Labour's Lost,' 32 Pitts (J.), printer of Seven Dials, 469 Eton School Lists, 314 Place-names, American, 155 Fate of the Tracys, 192 Planche, place-Dame, its meaning, 389 Fitzherbert (Mrs.), 530 Plantagenets, their descendants, 528 Gibbets, 376 Platt (H. E. P.), his ‘Byways in the Classics, 261, Jefferyes (Capt. J.), 496 352, 435 Nelsoniana, 245 Platt (J.), Jun., on Almansa, 315 Nelson's signal, 533 Arabian Nights,' 409 Piccadinny, 255 Ascham (Roger) : Schedule, 216 Punch, the beverage, 531 Badges, 55 Quotations wanted, 68, 168, 294 * Bathilda,' 93 Rushbearing, 216 Belot (Adolphe), 46 Satan's autograph, 133 Bombay Grab, 177 Screaming skull, 252 Detectives in fiction, 456 “Tertias of foot,” 12 Dumas, its pronunciation, 189 9, 95, 132, 215, 238, 496 ; of Old and New Testa- Herero, its pronunciation, 527 Kabafutoed, 335 Klimius (Nicholas), 153 Pier, earliest use of the word, 387, 451, 491 Knjaz, 152, 193 Pierpoint (R.) on American Civil War verse8, 296 Man of noses, 125 « Bear Bible,” Spanish, 189 March (Ausias), 469 Brougham Castle, 293 Melisande : Ettarre, 156 Buchanan (George), 234 Mereday, Christian name, 334 Charlemagne’s Roman ancestors, 116 Ondatra : its origin, 406 Cheshire words, 414 Paunches, a kind of silk, 366 Christie (J. H.), 252 “Pearls cannot equal the whiteness of his teeth," Cope of Bramshill, 97 355 Davies (Sir George), 36 Perrywbimptering, 127 Dickens or Wilkie Collins ? 255 Phooroa, a ghost-word, 105 Drake (Sir cis) and Chigwell Row, 416 Piccaniony, 27, 317 Duelling, its suppression in England, 333 Piece-broker, 412 Eton School Lists, 356 Potto, its etymology, 286 Fermor, 393 Praty, its origin, 346 Fleet Street, No. 53, 314 Quillin or Quillan : name and arms, 253 George III.'s birthday, 173 Rabi'ah, son of Mukaddam, 515 Gibbon, ch. lvi. note 81, 272 Resp., 50 Kniaz, 152, 334 Sagbalien, its pronunciation, 185 Looping the loop, 65 Sjambok, its pronunciation, 204 Lundy Island, 16 Smith in Latin, 457 Luther's Commentary on the Galatians, 156 Testout, 131, 353 Moon and bair-cutting, 234 “ This too shall pass away," 368 Moxhay (Mr.), Leicester Square showman, 35 Tholsels, 453 Polish royal genealogy, 196 Tinterero, 316 Quotations wanted, 208 Trafalgar, 471 Villikins and his Dinab,' 318 Welsh poem, 208 Pig, use of the word, 407, 449, 510, 536 Pleiades : Atlas and Pleione : the daisy, 387, 470, Pigeon and death folk-lore, 515 Pigmies and the cranes, Pompeian fresco, 266, 356, 417 Pleshey fortifications, 48, 116 Pigott (W. J.) on Davies of Cornwall, 368 Ply: to ply, etymology of the verb, 44, 110 Davye (Rouse), 289 Pocock (Nicholas), his paintings of battle of Nile, 468 Pig's-head supper, Christmas, 505 Poem in Welsb, containing only vowels, 208, 392, 516 “Pilgrim of eternity," applied to Byron, 68, 158, 213 Poets, English, and the Armada, 346, 414 Pillars, Adam's Commemorative, 69, 136 Poland (Sir H. B.) on Canning's riming dispatch, 307 Pillion, 72 Polar inbabitants, 413 Pinchbeck (W. H.) on Pinchbeck family, 33 Polish royal genealogy, 196 Pinohbeck family, 33, 77 Politeness=literary elegance, 465 Pink (W. D.) on Sir Robert Howard, 211 Politician on Italy, a "geographical expression,” 249 Joliffe family of Dorset, 307 Prime Ministers and newspapers, 146 Pink’s History of Clerkenwell' and T. E. Tomlins, Public meetings, 148 427 Twopenny for bead, 331 Pirates in Lundy Island, 16 War Office in fiction, 127 497 6 Pollard-Urquhart (Col. F. E. R.) on Hurstmonceaux Prideaux (Col. W. F.) on Trafalgar, 534 Wilde (Oscar), · De Profundis,' 233 Prideaux (W. R. B.) on David Colville, Scotch scholar, St. Thomas's Day custom, 527 149 Pollard (H. P.) on Cromwell Fleetwood, 74 Gibbets, 315 Prime Ministers who do not read newspapers, 146 Pompeii, photograph of labyrinth at, 168 Princess's Theatre, its history, 50 Printers' errors, 93 Prisoners' clothes as perquisites, 96 Prisons in Paris during the Revolution, 349, 394 Portraits which have led to marriages, 92 Probates, index of, 188, 277 Potemkin, its transliteration and pronunciation, 152, Pronunciation, nouns and verbs, 64 193 Prorogation of Parliaments, 145 Potter (G.) on beating the bounds, 31 Protestant, for member of the Church of England, 427 Pottery, French Revolution, 228, 252, 292 Proverbs and Phrases :Potto, etymology of the word, 286 A d'autres, dénicheur de merles, 504 Potts (R. A.) on inedited poem by Kingsley, 212 Bird in the breast, 448 Lamb's Panopticon, 127 Bush and grease, 207 Quotations wanted, 134, 249 Character is fate, 405 Pound, The, Rochester Row, 288 Crying down credit, 40 Pounde (Thomas), S.J., his biography, 184, 268, 472 Dying beyond my means, 127 Praty, its origin, 346 Eau bénite de cour, 505 Prayer for twins, 176 Facts are stubborn things, 204 Preaching in New England, 1652, funds for, 329 Fate of the Tracys, 128, 192, 274 Premonstratensian abbeys, list of, 169, 231, 298 Graisser la patte, 505 Prentis (C.), bis picture of the 'Star and Garter,' 150 Growing down, like a cow's tail, 264 Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Will Registers, 95, Il ne faut pas mettre tous ses oeufs dans un panier, 155 505 Prescot (Bartholomew), his writings, 67, 137 Infant phenomenon, 507 Press, English, and the Treaty of Peace, 1815, 167 Pillar to post, 528 Price (F. G. Hilton) on Brougham Castle, 293 Poeta nascitur non fit, 35 Greyfriars burial-ground, 352 Rising of the lights, 66, 135 Prideaux (Col. W. F.) on Amir of Afghanistan's title, That same, 448, 515 66 Towers of silence, 264 Anstice (Joseph), 150, 172 Ptolemy III. Euergetes, his wife Berenice, 126, 193 'Arabian Nights,' 513 Public-house, evolution of caravanserai to, 308, 413 Chevy Chase,' 155 Public meeting, use of the term, 148, 213 Christ's Hospital, 355 Puckeridge and pickeridge, their connexion, 367, 495 Coliseums, old and new, 176 Puckery-hickery, meaning of the term, 87, 232 Concerts of Antient Music, 49 Pudding made by North American Indians, 288 Puggle, Essex dialect word, 486 Pulpits, open-air, 430 Punob,' John Leech and, 107 Orown Street, Soho, 373 Punch, the beverage, origin of the word, 401, 477, 531 Dekker's • Gull's Hornbook,' 227 Punctuation in MSS. and printed books, 144, 262 Evans : Symonds : Hering : Garden, 454 “Famous” Chelsea, 470 Purchas (V. R. P.) on Shakespeare's portrait, 494 Puzzle pictures, 247 Pychard, name for a woodpecker, 55 Q. (A. N.) on “Mr.," 67 • Oxford Ramble,' 78 Ithamar, 516 Quenington, Gloucestershire, its history, 36 Kempe (Abp.), 434 Quillan or Quillin surname and arms, 206, 253 Kingsway and Aldwych, 410 Quince and mulberry folk-lore, 386, 438 Lamb (Charles), 445 Quotations: Monro (Major), 72 A maiden's dreaming, 509 A pagan suckled in a creed outworn, 460 A rose-red city half as old as Time, 435 Alas! for man who has no sense, 68 St. Nicholas Shambles, 348 All quiet along the Potomac, 230, 297, 354 Swedish royal family, 196 Aliudque cupido, Mens aliud suadet, 480 An original something, fair maid, 529 As Dutchmen hear of earthquakes in Calabria, 247 Quotations : Quotations :Be sure that Love ordained, 115 Thou cam’st not to thy place by accident, 468 Bush and grease, 207 Thoughts that do often lie, 100 Character is destiny, 405 To maintain the day against the moment, 168, 197 Cogitavi dies antiquos et annos æternos, 360 To make bis destiny his choice, 488 Could a man be secure, 168, 237, 294, 393 Totum sume, fluit, 350, 391 Disce pati, si vis victorum tu fore ciuis, 417 Unanswered yet ? the prayer your lips, 220, 346) Do the work that's nearest, 38 Un jour de fête, 92 Ego sum Rex Romanus et supra grammaticam, Warm summer sun, shine friendly here, 135 480 We eat what we can, 260 Fair Eve knelt close to the guarded gate, 529 When danger's rife, 440 Fly, envious Time, 460 When in doubt-don't, 408 Fountain-heads and pathless groves, 350, 390 Who lights the faggot? not the full faith, 10 Gashed with honourable scars, 540 Whose part in all the pomp that fills, 529 Hence, all you vain delights, 350, 390 With a heart of furious fancies, 68, 134 I lay me down, hoping to sleep, 140 With kind confiding eyes raised up, 509 I live for those who love me, 280 Words may be as angels, 127 I who a decade past had lived recluse, 208, 334 Yet all these were, when no man, 468, 513 If by each rose we see, 127 R. (A. F.) on His Majesty and motor car, 7 I've no money, so you see, 38 Spongeitis, 347 R. (B.) on Warwickshire charter, 128 Welsh poem, 392 R. (E. L.) on Elizabeth Milton, 149 Libris autem morientibus, 154 R. (J. F.) on Lord Chesterfield, 158 Like as the waves make for the pebbled shore, Coryat's Crudities,' 49 168, 197 French Revolution pottery, 228 R. (R. T.) on 'Poetic Works by a Weird,' 489 Rabelais and Beckford, 264 Rabi'ah, son of Mukaddam, pronunciation of the Mox ruet et bustum, 154 names, 449, 515 Nobile virtutis genus est patientia, 369, 417 Radcliffe (Ann), povelist, d. 1823, ber biography, 9,76 O! for a booke and a sbadie nooke, 229 Radcliffe (Ann), poetess, d. 1767, her biography, 9, 761 Oh, don't the days seem limp and long, 92 Radcliffe (J.) on Academy of the Muses, 54 Oh, that there may be nothing! If again, 28 Almsmen, Westminster Abbey, 236 Parva sed apta, 387 Child executed for witchcraft, 38 Pearls cannot equal the whiteness of his teeth, Enderby (Sic W.), 9 307, 355 Fermor, 393 Qui souvent se pèse, 14 Gytha, mother of Harold II., 232 She has come unarray'd in the pomp, 208 House of Lords, 1625-60, 36 She never found fault with you, 249, 316 Lulach, King of Scotland, 178 Sorrow tracketh wrong, 10, 273, 353 Mint at Leeds, 51 Still like the bindmost chariot wheel is cursed, 529 Rates in aid, 53 Straight is the line of duty, 180 Wood (G.), clockmaker, 68 Raddidoo=wideawake hat, Yorkshire term, 69 Railway, first Belgian, 267, 475; earliest electric, 406The fate of the Tracy8, 128, 192, 274 Rain caught on Holy Thursday, 447, 497 Rainsford (F.) on Rainsford Hall, 349 Ralling (J. F.) on quotations wanted, 127 Ramsay (David), his 'Military Memoirs of Great Randolph (J. A.) on detached belfries, 207 Ratcliffe (T.) on Lord Bathurst and the highwayman,. These are the Britons, a barbarous race, 510 495 They made her a grave too cold and damp, 340 Black cat folk-lore, 505 This too shall pass away, 368, 435, 456 Boar's head, 506 Those only deserve a monument, 488 Bobby Dazzler, 208 Those temples, pyramids, and piles tremendous, Christmas bush, 502 260 Christmas pig's head supper, 505 |