Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/209

 TENTH SERIES.

201

Patmore (Coventry) and Swedenborg, xi. 346,

433 Paton (H.) on Patrick Bell, Laird of Antermony,

iii. 12. Gumming (Col. Sir John), ii. 269 Patriarchs, (Ecumenical, of Constantinople, list of,

i. 249

Patrick on bookseller's motto, v. 208. Collins, i. 515. Conolly (Right Hon. William), vi. 354. Irish ejaculatory prayers, i. 337 Patrick (A.) on Bell family of Annandale, vi. 29.

Moon and hair-cutting, iv. 116 Patrick (D.) on Tay and Tiber, ix. 464 Patrick (Richard), M.D., his biography, xii. 348 Patron saints and their chapels, xi. 109 Patten (Rev. Thomas), name-coincidence, xi. 144 Pattens, notices relating to, ix. 268, 336, 394 Patterdale, " King of," the title, i. 149, 193, 276 Patterson (Walter), Governor of Prince Edward

Island, d. 1798, xi. 207 Patterson (W. H.) on Irish soil exported, iii. 394.

Newland (Abraham), iii. 89 Patterson family, xi. 25, 218 Patty, pet name for Martha, vi. 210, 255 Paul (F.) on Pharos at Dover Castle, vi. 393. Villiers (George), Duke of Buckingham, iii. 173 Paul (George), lieutenant, 1783, iv. 49, 212 Paul (John), conscientious scruples against war,

x. 9 Paul (John) or Paul Jones, signatures, xi. 447 ;

xii. 12

Paul family, xii. 253

' Paules Fete," a measure, ii. 87, 138 ; iv. 435, 493 Paulitian language, its locality, ix. 167 ; x. 157,

254

Paul's Alley in 1601, xi. 266 Paunches, a kind of silk, iv. 366 Pauper's song, ix. 308 Pavia, discovery of the original altar of the,

Certosa, i. 421

Pavia (Lorenzo da) at Venice, i. 76 Pavilion Theatre, Whitechapel Road, and John

Farrell, iii. 188, 252 Pawlet of Paultoons, Hants, xii. 189 Pawnbrokers, Tuscan and rue, i. 148, 231 Pawnbroker's sign and the Medici arms, iii. 207,

330 Pawnshop, earliest use of the word, ii. 267, 354 ;

vii. 514

Pawter, dialect use of the word, vi. 425 Payen-Payne (De V.) on Queen Victoria's letters,

viii. 425.

Payne (J. F.) on Samnitis, xii. 133 Payne (Tom), his ' Literary Coffee-house " at

Mews Gate, vii. 409, 492 ; viii. 55 Pazziazzi or Paziazi (M. von), his ' Voice from the

Danube,' ii. 109 Peach (C. H. R.) on dancing at Echternach, ix. 427. Holt Castle, xi. 395. Palm Sunday, ix. 451. Snail-eating and gipsies, x. 69 Peach (H. H.) on cast-iron chimney -back, ii. 296. Galileo portrait, ii. 492. Historical tract, iii. Kynaston's translation of Chaucer, iv. 109. Verses : author wanted, iii. 70. Wassail iii. 10

Peachey (G. C.) on ample, i. 8. ' Athense Canta- brigienses,' i. 348. Book collectors, i. 198. Coutances and Winchester, ii. 154. Crayle (Cravle), xii. 128. Dickens on half-baptized x. 135. Field-names at Brightwalton, i. 228 Pawnbrokers and rue, i. 231. Touching for the king's evil, iv. 287

Peacock, its associations and symbolism, v. 6 130, 177, 193'; on church bells, viii. 208

Peacock (C. J.) on statues in the British Isles,

xii. 114

Peacock (C. M.) on Lincolnshire saying, iii. 145 Peacock (E.) on almanac, c. 1744, v. 12. Ameri- cans in English records, vi. 38. ' As thick as inkle-makers," x. 235. Aurora borealis in Lincolnshire, i. 242. Authors of quotations wanted, vii. 12, 428. Axholme Priory, v. 373. B.V.M. and the birth of children, vii. 377, 437. ' Bat Bearaway," 168. ' Bathilda,' iv. 93. Beating the bounds, iv. 31. Becket (Thomas a), his martyrdom, i. 450 ; ii. 274. Beer sold without a licence, ii. 9. ; viii. 294. Birds of East Finmark, v. 6. Birth-marks, i. 430. Blather : bladder, vi. 456. Blood used in building, ii. 455. Children at executions, ii. 346. Coffins and shrouds, viii. 137. Cold Harbour, i. 4.96. Collins (Mortimer), x. 249. Corn, damage to, i. 283. Crucified thieves, xi. 394. Custis (John), vii. 90. Dancing at Echternach, ix. 474. Dead animals exposed on trees, x. 149. Don- caster weather-rime, v. 407. Eglia in Lincoln- shire, viii. 490. Elder-bush folk-lore, viii. 211. England's lack of noblesse, iv. 157. Evil eye in Italy, ix. 216. Evils, field-name, xi. 468. Field-names, West Haddon, i. 94. Fitzhamon, i. 132. Flies in coffin, iv. 386. Font consecra- tion, ii. 336. Frost and its forms, i. 158. Ghost-words, iii. 498. Girl sentenced to be burnt alive, vi. 129. Glowworm or firefly, i. 112. Hair becoming white through fear, ix. 445. Hamlet as a Christian name, viii. 4. Higgins (Godfrey), ii. 276. Incledon :, Cooke, iv. 92. Isle of Dogs, iii. 427. Jenion's Intack, i. 477. Ketty land, ix. 338. Kissing gates, ii. 395. Leech-gathering, ix. 290. ' Letters from Belgium,' ix. 51. Lincoln inventory, iii. 388. Lincolnshire folk-jest, ix. 367. London and Birmingham Railway, viii. 234. Lunar halo and rain, vi. 338. Madden's ' Havelock the Dane,' iii. 429. Mediaeval churchyards : grave- stones, viii. 452. ' Missal, The,' iv. 34. Mother- hood late in life, ix. 118. Murderer, disguised, in folk-lore, i. 266. " No flowers," xii. 178. Ocean penny post, viii. 405. One : oats, their pronunciation, xii. 416. Oxen drawing carriages, xi. 136. Palm Sunday and hill- climbing, vi. 115. Pigmies and cranes, iv. 417. Pin witchery, ii. 272, 376. Poll-books, vii. 415. Portobello, in England, vii. 277. 'Praises let Britons sing," ix. 350. Premier Grenadier of France, i. 385. Proverb against gluttony, v. 470. Rebus in churches, v. 317. Recusants' marriages, xi. 373. Red Indians in poetry, vi. 337. Roman guards from Palestine to Lincoln, ii. 469. Ropes used at executions, v. 266. Royal arms in churches, v. 336. St. Mary the Egyptian, xi. 391. St. Patrick at Orvieto, i. 131. St. Sunday, xi. 275. Sea walls, their repair, iv. 187. Semaphore signalling, xi. 336. ' Sobriquets and Nicknames,' vii. 430 ; viii. 37. Southcott (Joanna), her celestial passports, xi. 16. Southey on a Newcastle miracle, x. 207. Smugglers' caves, v. 282. " Stripping cows," xii. 476. Suck-bottle : feeding-bottle, viii. 257. Suicides buried in open fields, iv. 397. Sulphur matches : match- maker's song, vii. 396. " Sun and Anchor ' Inn, i. 504 ; ii. 132. " Te Igitur," xii. 115. Thimbles, xi. 66. Tholsels, iv. 516. Thorn- bury on the Civil War, iv. 148. .Toothache, x. 171. Tudor spelt Tydder, xii. 117. Twitchel iii. 351. Village mazes, ix. 475. Wake, Ellis,