Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/234

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GENEBAL INDEX.

Quotations :

Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepe cadendo ,

iii. 47 Guy ! Guy ! Guy ! stick him up on high,

x. 384, 434, 496

Habacuc est capable de tout, x. 268, 314 Haec Celebratio non omnino dissimilis,

x. 127, 270 Hail, beauteous stranger of the grove,

v. 240 Have the courage to be ignorant, xi. 249,

317 Have you any religion ? None to speak of,

ii. 49 Have you heard that it was good to gain the

day, vii. 228 Have you not heard love is more fierce, viii.

388 He came on the angel of victory's wing, vii.

149

He deigns His influence to infuse, i. 468 He died as such a man should die, vii. 149 He dropped the shuttle and the loom stood

still, iii. 469

Heeper, peeper, chimney-sweeper, x. 12 He first deceas'd ; she for a little tri'd, vi.

234

He is a being of deep reflection, i. 448 He loseth his thanks who promiseth and

delayeth, v. 397

He nothing common did or mean, vii. 211 He plucked off both his wings and made him

quills, iii. 480 He ran a race, but never reached his goal, xii.

148 He read the lessons twice on Sunday last,

viii. 230, 273

He sat beside the lowly door, iii. 328 He saw a certain minister, v. 220 He saw a world in a grain of sand, ii. 488 He seized her by her left leg, xi. 387 He the strong smiter, the earth-compeller,

ix. 229 He which drinketh well sleepetb well, x. 511 ;

xi. 53 He who knows not, and knows that he knows

not, i. 167, 235, 277 Heart of my heart, iii. 29 Hempseed I sow, xii. 208, 255, 296 Hence, all you vain delights, iy. 350, 390 Her mother she sells laces fine, ii. 260 Here and here did England help me, x. 68 Here in this ancient haunt of Peace, xi. 49 Here lyeth he who was borne and cried, vi.

234

Here's to thee an' me an' aw on us, ii. 10 Here wander two beautiful rivers, iii. 188 Heu : vitam perdidi, operose nihil ageudo,

iii. 88 ; ix. 34

Hie liber est in quo quaerit, iii. 447 Hilaris gens, cui libera mens, ii. 388 Hinc venti dociles resono, x. 126 His end was peace, x. 450 His [Homer's] scolding heroes, and his

wounded gods, i. 468

Hoc est vivere bis vita posse priori frui, ix. 49 Hoc habeo, quodcumque dedi, ii. 460 Hoc iter manifesta rotae vestigia cernes,

x. 128, 270 Honour to him who, self-complete if low, ix.

149 How blest the solitary's lot, vi. 275

Quotations :

How long ? How soon will they upbraid ?

i. 468

How the young earl had given, v. 208 How vain is life, vii. 356 Humanum est errare, iii. 78 ' I am Lycidas," said he, viii. 388 I am tired of four walls and a ceiling, xii.

509 I asked of Time for whom those temples

rose, i. 297

I cannot see the veiled face of Success, x. 268 I care not who writes the book that has a

good index, x. 469 ; xi. 76, 194, 234, 255 I counted two-and-seventy stenches, vi. 140 I expect to pass through. See / shall pass

through.

I have fought for queen and faith, v. 180 I have squandered, viii. 327, 374 I have this day practised the rule of life, ii.

130, 477

I hear a voice you cannot hear, vii. 55 I, John of Gaunt, vi. 466 I know, as my life grows older, ix. 49 I launch my bark on a wide, wide sea, x. 389 I lay me down, hoping to sleep, iv. 140 I lighted at the foot, ii. 347, 412, 535 I live for those who love me, iv. 280 I'm ninety-five, I'm ninety-five, ix. 328, 393,

455 ; x. 16, 55

I must confess your wine and vittle, vii. 232 I never pluck the rose, xii. 178 I praise the Frenchman, vii. 328 I say it with its best and oldest meaning, xii.

268

I see them on their winding way, xii. 348, 396 I shall pass through this world, i. 247, 316,

355, 433 ; v. 260, 393, 498 ; vi. 180 ; vii.

140 ; xi. 60, 366

I sing the hymn of the conquered, x. 356 I sit with my feet in a brook, iii. 408, 498 I've no money, so you see, iii. 469 ; iv. 38 I've watched the actions of his daily life ,

vi. 108 ; xii. 509 I who a decade past had lived recluse, iv. 208,

334 I will go forth 'mong men, not mailed in

scorn, v. 408 ; vi. 16 I would all men were free, viii. 347, 374 I would rather trust and be deceived, viii. 169

I would the sun should shine, viii. 230

Ibi inicipit fides, ubi, desinit ratio, i. 188 ;

ii. Ill

Icicles clink in the milkmaid's pail, vii. 208 Idols of the market-place, x. 129, 173 If by each rose we see, iv. 127 If I forget, iii. 88 If I it lose, v. 229, 299

If looking back for one short year, ix. 128 If lusty love should go in search of beauty,

xii. 88, 116

If more is needed to be known, vii. 69 If pathos be a sense of loss, iii. 88 If sadly thinking, with spirits sinking, xi. 268,

334

If what seemed afar so grand, vi. 389 Ignorance in motion is dangerous, xii. 88 Ignoratio causarum mater erroris, i. 188

II fut historien pour rester orateur, xii. 127 II n'en est point pour vous, vi. 414

Hie penes Persas Magus, x. 127

In adversities to compress murmur, ii. 130