Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/235

 TENTH SEEIES.

227

Quotations:

In all she did, ii. 289

In ancient times the sacred plough employ'd,

vi. 149 In antient days when Dame Eliza reign'd,

iii. 468

In caelo nunquam spectatam, x. 128, 271 In cauda venenum, iii. 428, 476 In light I will remember, v. 170 In Liquorpond Street, as is well known to

many, x. 217 In marriage are two happy things allowed,

vii. 309, 374, 453

In matters of commerce, i. 469 ; iv. 307 In men whom men condemn as ill, v. 248, 316 In minimum naturale dabile, i. 188 In old Norse ballad have I heard, viii. 150 In order to love human nature, xii. 488 In some old night of time, i. 168 In that new world which is the old, x. 68 In the dark hour of shame I deigned to

stand, xii. 130

In the hot clasp of Victory, x. 309 In things essential, unity, vi. 388 In times of old, when time was young, vi. 149 Inebriated with the exuberance of his own

verbosity, ii. 67, 110 Ingeniosus in alienis malis, ii. 130 Instinct is untaught ability, ii. 49, 158 Invitat ultro te domus ipsa, i. 188 Is he gone to a land of no laughter, x. 428,

476 Is there never a chink in the world above,

v. 108

It is misogyny rather than misogamy, vi. 428 It is too late ! Ah, nothing is too late, x. 448,

497 J'ai servi, command^, vaincu quarante

ann^es, xi. 49 Jam mansueta mala, ii. 130 Je ne voudrais pas reprendre mon cceur, vi.

88 ; vii. 215

Jesus Hominum Salvator, ii. 106, 190 Jovi hospitali, x. 209

Jowk, and let the jow gae by, x. 129, 174 Jus caulis solvit, cujus substantia stringit, vi.

373, 492 Justitia, una alias virtutes continet omnes,

x. 127, 515

King David was King David, viii. 236 Kiss me, and do not grieve, xii. 348 Kitty, a fair but frozen maid, viii. 48 ; ix. 317 La vie est vaine, v. 220 ; vi. 234 ; vii. 15 Lack of appreciation, x. 247 Laid out for dead, let thy last kindness be,

vi. 173

Lame dogs over stiles, iv. 38 L'amour est 1'histoire de la vie des femmes,

iii. 148 ; iv. 92 ; v. 397 Land o' carefu' cannie bodies, ix. 29 Land of hope and glory, xii. 328 Last eve I paused beside a blacksmith's door,

iv. 249, 492

Latin quotations, v. 88 Laus sequitur fugientem, i. 188 ; ii. 276 Le hasard c'est peut-tre le pseudonyme de

Dieu, xi. 387, 438

Leave me not wild and drear, viii. 488 Les beaux esprits se rencontrent, ix. 488 ;

x. 74

Les grandes douleurs sont muettes, iii. 148 ; iv. 16 ; viii. 169

Quotations :

Let Persian dames th' umbrella's ribs display ,

vii. 267

Let the wealthy and great, iii. 228, 353, 435 Leurs ecrits sont des vols qu'ils nous ont faits

d'avance, iii. 148, 335 Libris autem morientibus, iv. 154 Lieblich war die Maiennacht, ix. 469 Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale, vii. 356 Life's work well done, v. 460 Like as the waves make for the pebbled shore,

iv. 168, 197

Like ivy, woman's love doth cling, vi. 48 Like some poor, nigh-related guest, ix. 80 Like the lion bold, x. 408 Like the Scythian Ateas, x. 127, 270 Listen I the mighty Being is awake, viii. 466 Litera scripta manet, i. 188, 297 Lites fuge macrum arbitrium, x. 128 Live and take comfort, i. 168, 217 Lo ! where Belial moves across the Hall, viii.

272 Lone sitting by the shores of Old Romance,

ix. 248

Lonely and huge, the giant yew, xii. 388 Lord, what will all the people say ! x. 188 Lose this day loitering, x. 428, 476, 514 Lost in a convent's solitary gloom, i. 67 Love and sorrow twins were born, iv. 488 Love [Fame ?] flees from the cold one, iv. 509 Love in phantastick triumph sat, iv. 48, 132,

212

Love taught me shame, ix. 149, 214 Love that groweth unto faith, iv. 249 Magnum vectigal est parsimonia, ii. 326, 418 Malbrook s'en va-t-en guerre, ix. 75, 158 Man doth usurp all space, xi. 429 Man dwells apart, but not alone, vii. 208 Man in the street, v. 100, 167 Man is immortal till his work is done, ii. 20 Man never rises higher than when he knows

not, vii. 208, 435, 514 Mario's voice hushed cries in purgatory,

vi. 469

Massachusetts has wreathed it, vi. 296 Matches and tunder, vii. 396 Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, xii. 47, 95,

154, 218, 276

May virtue all thy paths attend, iii. 109 Me tenet ut viscus et interficit ut basilicus,

i. 188 Meditation is the science of the saints, ii. 49 ;

xii. 477

Men are like medlars, x. 109 Men are not worthy of the honeycomb, xi.

48, 196 (Midas) qui fame peribat quod auro vesci

nequibat, i. 188 Millions for defence, but not a cent for tribute,

viii. 500 Mine eyes are made the fools o' the other

senses, i. 168 Mr. Pillblister and Betsy his sister, ii. 408 ;

iii. 16 ; ix. 109, 217 Moaning in agony, ix. 268, 337 Moonless stars, viii. 488 Mon verre n'est pas grand, mais je bois dans

mon verre, iii. 148, 197 ; iv. 92 Monsters of imagination, begotten upon a

cloud of statistics, xii. 8

Mony a pickle maks a mickle, vi. 388, 456 ; vii. 11, 112, 215

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