Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/240

 232

GENERAL INDEX,

Quotations :

This is the old farm-house, xi. 248 This main miracle that thou art thou, v. 489 This too shall pass away, iv. 368, 435, 456 This world is a good one to live in, ii. 26 Those only deserve a monument, iv. 488 Those temples, pyramids, and piles tremend- ous, iv. 260 Thou cam'st not to thy place by accident,

iv. 468

Thou hast conquered, O pale Galilsean, i. 388 Though beaten back in many a fray, xi. 248 Though every prospect pleases, xii. 206, 256 Though lost to sight, to memory dear, ii. 345 ;

iii. 327 ; xi. 249, 438, 498, 518 ; xii. 55, 288 Though nature, red in tooth and claw, vii. 40 Though outwardly a gloomy shroud, vii. 35 Though the mills of God grind slowly, iii. 280 Though with pistols 'tis the fashion, vii. 448 Thoughts that do often lie, iv. 100 Three poets in three distant ages born, ix. 250 Three women France hath borne, vi. 29 Thronging through the cloud-rift, xii. 328,

375

Thus didst thou, i. 428 Thy brandished whynyard all the world

defies, vii. 309

Till down he fell, yet falling fought, vii. 426 Timidi nunquam statuerunt tropa3um, vii. 49,

158

Tire le rideau, la farce est joue"e, vii. 266 'Tis hard if all is false that I advance, viii. 508 'Tis love that makes the world go round,

x. 368, 497

'Tis not the brave, the rich, the wise, xi. 88 'Tis only in the land of fairy dreams, vi. 129 ;

vii. 309

'Tis said, by men of deep research^ viii. 230 'Tis sorrow builds the shining ladder up,

ix. 249

Titulo dignatus equestri, x. 128 To an exact perfection they have brought, vii.

309

To-day, too, you hindered the cook, vii. 426 To her rich language blocks of purest ore, viii.

169 To maintain the day against the moment,

iv. 168, 197

To make his destiny his choice, iv. 488 To mark the progress of the vernal dawn,

xii. 148

To me the meanest flower that blows, vii. 28 To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,

vii. 356

To object is always easy, viii. 230 To possess one's soul, xi. 14 To see a world in a grain of sand, iii. 13 To see the children sporting on the shore,

v. 248, 295

To those they know do love them best, i. 189 Tot congestos noctesque diesque, labores,

i. 168, 433

Totum sume, fluit, iv. 350, 391 Toujours mcontent de ce qu'il vient de faire,

vii. 448, 493 Tous les blondins chez moi vont a l'e"cole,

viii. 47 Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner, vii.

400

Towards his winter store, xii. 208 Transeat hoc quoque inter fugacia bona, ii.

130

Quotations:

True as the shell, v. 248

True earnest sorrows, rooted miseries, i. 168"

True happiness is not the growth of earth r

vi. 127 True, the white moon, like a lonely warder,.

vi. 129, 173

Truth for ever on the scaffold, iii. 128 Truth heals the wound, viii. 251 Tu cole justitiam, teque atque alios manefc

ultor, viii. 289, 454 Tua vicit comcedia, i. 188 Turpe mori post te solo, ii. 281 Turpis libido (scilicet) potens vener6, x. 128 r

270 'Twas morn, and on the mountain top, viii.

231 'Twas the Sabbath day, and the church bells,

xii. 8

Two constant lovers joined in one, ii. 289 Two men look out through the same bars,

vi. 229 ; x. 468 ; xi. 14 Two shall be born a whole wide world apart,

x. 309, 353, 413, 476 ; xi. 94 Ubi honor non est, x. 127, 271 Ubi lapsus, quid feci ? ii. 281 Ubi rudentes stridunt, v. 27 ; vii. 337 Ubique ingenia hominum situs formant, i. 49 6 ; Un gros serpent mordit Aurele, vii. 246, 297 Un jour de fete, iii. 148 ; iv. 92 ; vi. 81 Un sot trouve toujours, vi. 400 Unam semper amo, cujus non solvor ab

hamo, i. 188, 437 Unanswered yet? The prayer your lips,

iv. 220, 346

Union of mind, as in us all one soul, i. 468 Unus Pellseo juveni non sufficit orbis, x. 173 Upon a summer's day, c. 1320, ix. 208 Upon the hills of Breedon, x. 168, 218 Ut vites pcenam, de potibus incipe ccenam,

vi. 373, 492

Velut inter ignes, Luna minores, iii. 88 Verify your references, vi. 62, 131, 154, 174 Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, vii. 55, 436 Vina probantur odore, sapore, nitore, colore,

vi. 373, 492 Vir bonus es, doctus, prudens, vii. 228 ;

x. 173

Virtue. . . .is Peregrina in terris, ii. 130 Vitse non pigeat cum funus amatur ? i. 188 Vital warmth gave the last human motion,

xii. 208 Vivit post funera virtus, i. 188 ; ii. 276, 281,

351 Voltaire, quel que soit le nom dont on le

nomme, iii. 148 Vox, et praeterea nihil, ii. 281 Walking in style by the banks of the Nile,

vii. 508 ; viii. 32 Warm summer sun, shine friendly here,

iii. 288 ; iv. 135

Was I deceiv'd, or did a sable cloud, vi. 489 Was martial and high, v. 2 OS Wave may not foam, ii. 149, 276 Wax to receive and marble to retain, i. 328 We eat what we can, iv. 260 We grow \ip at random, vii. 309 We mortals cross the ocean of this world,

vii. 208, 254

We muse on glories gone, v. 208 We possess an aristocracy the most demo- cratic, vii. 428, 493