Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/74

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GENERAL INDP]X.

Clement XI. (Pope) and Bishop John Gordon,

viii. 450 ; ix. 12 Clement family, x. 69 Clementi-Smith (Rev. P.), first clergyman elected

to City Corporation since Reformation, iii.

24, 134, 175 Clements (H. J. B.) on arms on a brass, xii. 278.

Bibliotheca Farmeriana, vii. 12. Conyers, iv.

57. Edwards of Halifax, x. 54. Heraldry,

ii. 490. Irish bog butter, v. 416. ' Nitor in

adversum," viii. 474. Pellican family, xii. 315.

Place, v. 333. Sainsbury Collection, ix. 494.

Steward of the Household, v. 396. Warner

(Sir Thomas), xi. 195. Woldock family, x. 78 Clement's Inn knocker, xi. 69, 117 Clement's Inn sundial, its history, vi. 30, 117, 173 Clemesha (H. W.) on Canapolitans, xi. 429 Cleopatra, Shakespeare and Tennyson on, ix. 121 ;

pictures of, 194

Clephan (R. C.) on " Brown Bess," v. 91 Clergy, inferior, their appellations in early records,

ix. 454 ; x. 175, 250, 353 Clergy, sporting, before the Reformation, ii. 89,

293 Clergy in wigs, viii. 149, 214 ; ix. 497 ; x. 16, 78,

158, 356, 392

Clergyman, as privateer, i. 495 ; as City Councillor, iii. 24, 134, 175 ; with battledore in pulpit, viii. 450 ; ix. 53 Clergymen, Anglican, biographical notes on, vi.

30, 114

Clerical costume in the nineteenth century, vi. 406 Clerical interments, x. 148, 233 Clerke (Sir Philip Jennings), Bart., c. 1774, iv. 429 Clerkenwell, theatre in Rawstorne Street, iii. 329 Clerks, parish, stories of, ii. 128, 215, 373 ; men of

family as, ix. 35, 271, 334

Cleveland (General J. W.), his descent, x. 289 Clever, etymology of the word, vi. 25, 76 Clies (Henrietta) of Lisbon = Admiral Lord

Rodney, i. 226

Cliffe and Steemson families, v. 169, 217 Clifford's Inn, its history, ix. 407 Clim of the Clough, ballads on, xii. 386, 494 Clindenin (William), M.D., died c. 1795, vii. 290 Clindening (G. T.) on Glendonwyn of Glendonwyn,
 * Clifford Priory,' novel, vi. 169

x. 210

Clinson (O.) on " That same," iv. 515 Clio on local ' Notes and Queries,' iii. 498. Mete- yard (Miss), vi. 77. Ropes used at executions, v. 498. Thackeray queries, i. 207. Thumb (Tom), his first appearance in London, vi. 13 Clippingdale (S. D.) on antelope as crest, ix. 517. Belfries, detached, iv. 415, 513. Bradford-on- Avon, xii. 507. Clippingdale, vi. 151. Doctors who remained in London during the Plague, xi. 266 ; xii. 18. Estates held by peculiar tenures, ix. 197. Fleetwood brass, vi. 137. Heraldic, v. 455. Leech-gathering, ix. 291. London and Birmingham Railway, viii. 292. Patrick (Richard), M.D., xii. 348. Poisons, ix. 412. Speech after removal of tongue, ix. 296. West London rivers, viii. 347, 414. " World Turned Upside Down," viii. 355., Yellow-hammer superstitions, xi. 452 Clippingdale family history, vii. 37 Clippingdale surname, its origin, vi. 151, 237, 472 Clive (Lord), error in Macaulay's essay on, iii. 405 Cloak used in wooing, vi. 150 Clock, made by Br^guet for Napoleon, i. 446 ;

made by W. Franklin, ii. 448, 513 Clock, royal, and press reference, c. 1903, ix. 429

Clockmakers : J. Turin, i. 107 ; Beliard, vii. 268 ;

Lancaster, ix. 487

Clocks : stopped at death, iii. 124, 175 ; with words instead of figures, v. 349, 413, 476 ; vi. 36 ; of St. Dunstan's-in-the-West, xii. 49, 278 Clocks, Cortel, meaning of the term, viii. 89, 156 Clocks, grandfather, book on, ix. 409 Clog or log, the Yule, iii. 11, 57, 155, 256 Cloister er= choir -nun, use of the word, viii. 467;

ix. 94

Close, as a French noun, iv. 89 Close (Poet), his works, i. 409 ; ii. 232 Closets, hair-powdering, iv. 349, 417, 453; v. 57,

95 135 177 394

Closets in' Edinburgh buildings, ii. 89, 154, 234, 297 " Closure-by-compartment," the phrase, ii. 106 Cloth, illustration of " walking ' or " fulling,"

v. 169, 212, 293

Cloth, Aylsham, in the fourteenth century, i. 4, 172 Clothes and their influence, xii. 468 Clothes of prisoners as perquisites, iii. 369, 472 ;

iv. 96

Clothing, mediaeval inventory, iii. 346 Clothing terms, English, in foreign tongues, xii.

284, 474

Clouds, their formation, ix. 167, 213 Clough, 16th-century pronunciation of the word,

ix. 250

Clove and nail, the measures, iii. 41, 134, 231 Clover Leaf, Fellows of the, i. 7, 193 Club (O.) on Place-names in -ox, ix. 508 Club, name for a university women's, i. 489 ; ii. 33 Club cups shaped like a hand, iv. 327, 397 Clubs ; Dr. Samuel Johnson's Club, 1783, and Literary Club, 1764, their membership, v. 190 ; convivial, c. 1740-1820, ix. 448 Cluet (Richard), D.D., c. 1651, his burial-place,

x. 148

Cluni on women voters, ii. 494 Clutterbuck (Robert) on Thurtell and Weare,

xii. 283

Clyse, dialect word, i. Ill Coaching houses in London, 1680, viii. 1, 95 Coachman's epitaph at Edinburgh, ii. 96 Coal Hole in the Strand, its history, v. 306, 353, 394 Coat of arms. See Heraldry. Cobb (G. H.) on Edward Gee, ix. 389 Cobberers and nutting time, x. 185 Cobbett (W.), criticisms on Shakespeare and

Milton, xi. 127, 194

Cobden (Richard), bibliography, i. 481 ; ii. 3, 62, 103, 142 ; commemorative tablet, ii. 425 ; earliest political writing, v. 501 Cobham (C.) on curious Christian names, i. 171. Fonts desecrated, ii. 170. Tide in the Thames, extraordinary, iii. 135 Cobkey, c. 1626, explanation of the word, vii. 448 ;

viii. 54

Cobweb-pills in 1781, i. 205, 273, 317 Cochineal, called mestique, vii. 105 Cochrane (B. A.) on Melchior Guydickens, v. 37 Cock ale, recipe for, xi. 7 Cock, white, v. the devil in China, ix. 486 Cockade, its history, ii. 407, 537 Cockade, right to use, iii. 356 Cockbaine (Christopher), d. 1844, his biography,

vi. 30 Cockburn (F. N.) on Thompson of Boughton, co.

Kent, i. 87

Cockburn (H. A.) on Thomas Gladstone, ii. 388 Cockburnspath, place-name, its pronunciation,

x. 430 ; xi. 72, 212, 335, 436 ; xii. 213, 256 Cock-Crower, King's, iii. 228, 312