Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/238

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GENEEAL INDEX.

Quotations :

Scripsit Aristoteles Alexandro de Physicorum,

i. 188, 437 Search the universe from Pole to Pole,

ix. 29

See a pin and pick it up, xii. 409, 518 See how false Belial struts across the Hall,

viii. 169

See how the grand old forest dies, ii. 487 See how the Learned Shades do meet, vi. 27 See, the ship in the bay is riding, viii. 269 Sentis ut sapiens, loqueris ut vulgus, i. 188 ;

ii. 110 She did not hear what the parson had said,

xii. 8

She has come unarray'd in the pomp, iv. 208 She let the legions thunder past, vii. 428 She never found fault with you, iv. 249,

316 She saw the snowy poles and moons of Mars,

ix. 13

Ship me somewheres east of Suez, ix. 248 Ships that pass in the night, i. 60 ; vii. 200 Should he upbraid, vi. 480 Si sumas ovum, molle sit atque novum, vi.

373, 492

Si vis amari, ama, ii. 281 Sic Angustiis a nobis devictis, x. 127 Sic volo, sic jubeo, ii. 380 Signa minora cape, i. 188 Silenus, old drunken Silenus, vii. 448 . Sin amor no hay verdad, xi. 129

Since all our lives long we travel towards,

vii. 266

Sing history, xii. 268, 335 Singing face, ii. 87, 133 Sir Walter reigned before me, x. 278 Sits in permanence, xii. 268, 335 Skoal 1 to the Northland ! Skoal 1 i. 280 Slander, meanest spawn of hell, v. 260 Slant o'er the snowy swart, xii. 27 Sleep after toil, i. 474 Sleep the sleep of the just, x. 368 Slow fade across a drearier sea, vi. 290 Snakes are generated out of human brains,

x. 127, 270

So I turned mine inside out, vi. 489 So might I, toiling morn till eve, vi. 389 So passeth in the passing of the day, vii. 208,

254

So we arraign her, but she. . . ., xi. 387 So when at last by slow degrees, ii. 388 Soft eyes of grey, ix. 288 Some say that Seignior Bononchini, xi. 426.

See Handel and Bononcini* Some say the age of chivalry is gone, vii.

169, 217 Somne levis quanquam certissima mortis

imago, ix. 390 Songstress in all time ended and begun, vi.

328

Sorrow tracketh wrong, iv. 10, 273, 353 Sorrow's crown of sorrows, ix. 68 Soul of my soul, I shall meet thee again, xii.

128, 158 Souvent 1'idee a 1'air de devancer les signes,

vi. 81

Sow an action, reap a habit, i. 300 ; viii. 40 Soyez comme un oiseau, viii. 90 Spake fiill well, in language quaint and olden,

vi. 249 Spartam nactus es, hanc exorna, vii. 105

Quotations :

Speak, History, who are life's victors ? vii..

328

Splendidae sunt vestes nobilitatis testes, i. 188 Spread the mapp'd-out skulls, x. 157 Star- trembling Night, mother of songs

unsung, xii. 148 Stat crux dum volvitur orbis, i. 308, 393 ; ii-

281

Steady and pure as stars that beam, xii. 289 Steal not this book, my friend, vii. 212 Still like the hindmost chariot wheel is cursed .,

iv. 529 ; v. 92

Still waters turn no mills, ix. 190 Sting of truth, xii. 268, 335 Straight is the line of duty, iv. 180 ; v. 160 ;.

vii. 140

Straight is the way to Acheron, xii. 391 Strangulatorium argumentum, i. 188 Studiis dignissima nostris, i. 188 Sufferance is the badge of all our tribe, viii. 24Q Sufficit huic tumulus, x. 108, 332 Sum similior ambigenti, ii. 130 Sunt tibi tortores serpentibus horridiores,.

i. 188

Supine in Sylvia's snowy arms he lies, vii. 309 Swayed by every wind that blows, iii. 148 ;.

iv. 92 Sweet bird whom the winter constrains, vi-

117 Sweet maid, who cultures t in thy vernal

prime, ix. 285

Take her, friend, or take her not, xii. 165 Take your courage in both hands, ix. 149 Tarn otii debet constare ratio quam negotii,.

v. 27 Tears are the oldest and the commonest, viu

309, 374 Tel est le triste sort de tout livre pret^,.

vi. 509

Tell me, my Cicely, why so coy, ii. 428 Tell me not in mournful numbers, x. 209 Tempora mutantur et nos mutamur in illis,.

iv. 86 Thanks are lost by promises delayed, iii. 148^

335

That cook (I could scold her), iii. 89, 134 That kingly attribute, the will, xii. 488 That life is long which answers life's great end,.

iv. 10, 158

That light militia of the lower sky, ix. 49, 113 That very law which moulds a tear, v. 40 The bloody writing by all nations torn, xii. 208 The breaking waves dashed high, iii. 80 The carrion crow, that loathsome beast, x. 88 The Changeling's fate we've set to view, ix. 137 The craftsmen's honours treasures are, x. 108 The dead but sceptred sovereigns who still

rule, v. 320 The drama's laws the drama's patrons give,.

vi. 480 The Druid grove, where many a reverend

yew, xii. 388 The East bowed low before the blast, vi. 129,.

173

Th' Eternal Wisdom doth not covet, xi. 88 The farmers of Aylesbury gathered to dine,.

xi. 410, 453, 470

The fate of the Tracys, iv. 128, 192, 274 The first crowned head that enters Lincoln's

walls, vii. 75 The French have taste in all they do, x. 129