Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/333

 Sidney, Sir Philip, 19, n. 4; 93, n. I.

Sidrophel, his character, 218; mistakes a paper-kite for a star, 229; is visited by Hudibras, 231; discovers the object of his visit, 233, 234: defends the science of astrology, 238, 240, 245; his altercation with Hudibras, 254; attacks the Knight, 254; is defeated and plundered, 256; counterfeits death. 259; Hudibras's epistle to, 262; 421, n. 3.

Sieve and Sheers, the oracle of, 234 and n. 2.

Silk-worms, belief respecting, 295, n. 2.

Simeon to Levi, 127 and n. 4.

Sisters, the fatal, 16.

Skimmington, some account of the, 196 and n. 3; 316, n. 1.

Skipper, 318; the master of a sloop, 318, n. 3.

Skull, trepanning of the, 262 and n. 2.

Sleeves and hose, slashed. 8, n. 1; 313 and n. 1.

Slubberdegullion, 114; a drivelling fool, 114, n. 4.

Smeck, canonical cravat of, 124 and n. 5.

Smectymnus, 194 and n. 1.

Snippets, 246 and n. 2.

Snuff, enlightened, 23 and n. 5.

Snuff-mundungus, 367 and n. 3.

Socrates, 129 and n. 5; 224, n. 5.

Soldier, paid 6d. per day, 154 and n. 5; curious privilege of the, 197, n. 1; carried off by the devil, 217 and n. 5.

Solemn League and Covenant, 33, n. 1; 62, 67. n. 2, 4; 68, n. 2; 178, n. 4; 318 and n. 4; 348 and n. 1.

Somerset, Protector, 42, n. 4.

Sooterkin, 332, and n. 2.

Soothsayers, mistakes of, 250 and n. 5.

Sophy, 318 and n. 1.

Sorbonist. 10, n. 5.

Souse and Chitterlings, 46 and n. 7.

South, Dr, sermon of, 124, n. 1.

Sow, wrong, by the ear, 235 and n. 2; suckled by a bitch, 264 and n. 2.

Sow-geldering, 162, 352.

Sowning, 153 and n. 3.

Spaniard, whipped, 21 and n. 1.

Spanish dignity, 21, n. 1.

Specieses, 225.

Speed and Stowe, 199 and n. 4.

Spenser, his "Fairy Queen," 2, n. 1; 86, n. 1; 231, n. 1; 248, n. 1; example of, 85, n. 1.

Spick and span, derivation of the words, 100, n. 3.

Spinning-wheels, 201 and n. 3.

Spirit Po, 316 and n. 4.

Sports, on Sundays, 32, n. 1.

Sprat's history of the Royal Society, 245, n. 3.

Spurs, badges of Knighthood, 165, n. 2.

Squirt-fire, 374 and n. 4.

Staffiers, 198 and n. 3.

Stars, new, appearance of, 229 and n. 2; falling, notion respecting, 231 and n. 2; office of the, 246 and n. 1.

State-camelion, 343 and n. 1.

Statute, 439 and n. 1.

Staving and tailing, 90 and n. 1.

Steal me from myself, 316 and n. 2.

Stennet, the wife of a broom-man, 149 and n. 6.

Stentrophonic voice, 277 and n. 5.

Stercorary chair, 128, n. 2.

Stery, one of Cromwell's chaplains, 335 and n. 2; his dream, 335, n. 3.

Stiller, pun upon the word, 316 and n. 2.

Stiles and Nokes, 120 and n. 1.

Stirrups, not in use in Cæsar's time, 21, n. 3.

Stocks, humorously described, 83 and n. 1; a wooden jail, 139 and n. 4.

Stoics, doctrines of the, 173, n. 1 2; 298, n. 2.

Stone, angelical, 237, n. 4.

Stools of repentance, 320.