Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/236

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GENERAL INDEX.

Quotations :

Morn, evening came ; the ocean smiled, viii.

428

Mors janua vitse, viii. 231, 334, 456 ; xii. 231 Mors mortis morti, ix. 208 Mors sceptra ligonibuis eequat, xii. 448, 494 Mother of many princes, v. 389 Mox ruet et bus turn, iv. 154 Multis annis jam peractis, ii. 476 Multis annis jam transactis, i. 56 Music of the spheres, x. 408, 454, 497 My heart beat wildly, and I woke, viii. 428,

475

My Lord the Sun, i. 126, 193 My master, old Pant, he fed me with pies,

i. 266

My mind to me a kingdom is, i. 488 ; ii. 32 My span of life is drawing to a close, v. 489 Naked came I out of my mother's womb,

xii. 265 Natura semper intendit quod est optimum,

i. 188 ; ii. 276

Natura vult omne grave ferri deorsum, i. 188 Nature, the kind old nurse, x. 408, 454 Ne gubernatoris quidem artem tranquillum

mare, vii. 337 Near barren fields, where honour dwells

viii. 75 Near the church and far from God, vi. 389,

496

Nee in ceteris est cantrarium reperire, i. 188 Nee minor est virtus, quam, quaerere, x. 127,

271 Needles and pins, needles and pins, xii. 409,

518 Needy knife-grinder, whither are you going?

iii. 380

Nescit servire virtus, i. 188 Night with her train of stars, viii. 327, 374 Nil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu,

i. 188, 297 Nil gravius nil improbius quam fcemina, x.

127

Nitor in adversum, ix. 356, 451 No billows roll nor wild winds blow, ii. 149 No chaffinch but implies the cherub, ix. 288,

393

No dying brute I view in anguish here, i. 468 No endeavour is in vain, i. 428, 474 No eye can mark the change or the decay,

vi. 489 No man could be so wise as Webster [Thur-

low] looked, ii. 407, 472 No man is a better merchant, i. 406 No more a goddess in the swimming dance,

vi. 27 No star ever rose or set without influence

somewhere, vii. 389, 453 No wit, money, nor means, xii. 207 Nobile virtutis genus est patientia, iv. 369,

417

Nolumus leges Anglise mutare, iii. 8

Non ego me methodo astringam serviliter

ulla, ix. 488 ; x. 16 Non olet (pecunia), viii. 64 Non sentis, inquit, te ultra malleum loqui ?

vii. 249, 354 Nor think the doom of man reversed for thee,

xii. 109, 158

Not all who seem to fail, i. 8 Not by the power of commerce, art, or pen,

vi. 449 ; vii. 233

Quotations :

Not last night, but the night before, xii. 409,

518 Not of themselves the gay beauties can please,

ix. 110 Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail,

i. 168

Nothing is more rare in any man, x. 247 Nothing is so stifling as perpetual symmetry ,

ii. 188 Nothing, thou elder Brother ev'n to Shade, vi.

397

Now this is every cook's opinion, y. 268, 397 Nunquam lenta fuit stomacho, vi. 373, 492 Nutrit ubi implumes peregrina Ciconia, x. 127 O beata solitude, o sola beatitude, i. 188 O broad and smooth the Avon flows i- 520 O brothers I speak of possibilities, ix. 149,

214 O Charidas, what is there down below ?

vii. 228, 274, 412

O Christ, how beautiful Thou art 1 xi. 29 O fairer than the fairest flow'r, ix. 149 O flexanima flosque feminarum, i. 188 O for a booke and a shadie nooke, iv. 229 ;

ix. 149, 192

O God ! O Good beyond compare ! vi. 240 O, if I 'd a voice and a tongue that could

speak, xii. 252

O Lernseam vere subolem, x. 128 O man J hold thee on in courage of soul, viii.

428 ; ix. 214 O marriage, happiest, easiest, softest state,

vii. 309

O memories that bless and burn, vi. 368, 414 O mortal man, thou that art born in sin,

vii. 309 ; viii. 388

O sinner ! I come by Heaven's decree, vii. 35 O that those lips had language ! iii. 128 O what a tuneful wonder seized the throng,

i. 468 O ye who patiently explore, vi. 389, 516;

vii. 200 Obstipo capite atque exporrecto labello, ix. 49,

113

Ocean, 'mid his uproar wild, v. 47, 77 O'er the great mystery of pain we moan,

ix. 488

Of all the operas that Verdi wrote, vii. 12 Of those for whom we fond emotions cherish,

vii. 158

Oh, don't the days seem limp and long, iv. 92 Oh, earlier shall the rosebuds blow, xii. 88,

116, 178

Ob for a blast of that dread horn, v. 100 Oh, not with gloomy brow severe, viii. 450 Oh tell me whence Love cometh, ix. 385, 474 ,

515 Oh, that there may be nothing ! If again,

iv. 28

Oh ! the Pilgrims of Zion, iii. 109, 176 Ohne Phosphor kein Gedanke, i. 248, 335 Omnia incommoda suo iure bona vocabautur.

vii. 176

Omnia mea desideria, labores omnes, ii. 130 Omnis mensa male ponitur absque sale,

vi. 373, 492 Omnis morbus contra complexionatum,

ii. 130

Omnium consensu capax-imperii, vi. 240 On entre, on crie, vi. 166, 216, 233, 335 On joue a ce jeu charmant, viii. 65