Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 1.djvu/656

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INDEX.

Notes and Queries, July 30, 1904.

Proverbs and Phrases :

Good cards for it, 104

Humanum eat errare, 389, 512

II est bon d'avoir des amis partout, 3, 485

Jolly good fellow, 4

Kick the bucket, 227, 314, 412

Kissed hand or hands, 135

Mais on revient toujours, 35

Monkey on the chimney, 288, 396

On revient. See Mais.

Part and parcel, 308

Purple patch, 447, 477, 510

Raining cats and dogs, 60

Red rag to a bull, 77

Ringing for Gofer, 6

Run of his teeth, 388, 436, 478

Shanks's mare and similar phrases, 345, 415

Shoe-cart : Go in shoe-cart, 415

Sit loose to, 75

Summer has set in with its usual severity, 38

T : It suits to a T, 478

The better the day, the better the deed, 448

Travailler pour le Roi de Prusse, 195

Twenty thousand ruffians, 107

Virtue of necessity, 8, 76, 110, 136 Providence, Island of, 13 Psalter and Latin MS. at Ugbrooke, 109 Public school, oldest, 166, 215, 257, 269 Publishing and bookselling, bibliography of, 81, 142,

184, 242, 304, 342 Pulpit at Wolverhampton, 407, 476 Puna at the Haymarket Theatre, 269 Purlieu, use and meaning of the word, 85 Purnell (E. K.) on Buckingham Hall or College, 108

Stewart (General Charles), 127 Purple, colour intended by, 71, 157, 214 41 Purple patch," earliest use, 447, 477, 510 Puttenham, his ' Proportion Poetical,' 465 Quarrell (W. H.) on quice, 195 Quarter of corn, 340 Quartered, hanged, and drawn, the punishment, 209,

275, 356, 371, 410, 497

Queen's Westminsters and St. Margaret's, Church, 363 Quelpaert Island, origin of the name, 265 Quesnel (Pierre), portraits by, 8 <}uice or quest=wood-pigeon, 126, 194 Quick-born children, 281 Quotations :

A face to lose youth for, 168, 217

A glut of pleasure, 168

A mountain huge upreared, 468

A not-expected, much unwelcome guest, 468

Accede ad ignem hanc, 188 Achilles ponders in his tent, 168

Ad rem et rhombum, 188

Amor est punctum quoddam stultitiae, 188

Amoris te vias omnes doceo, 188

An Austrian army awfully arrayed, 120, 148, 211, 258, 277, 280

And better death than we from high to low, 190, 257

An hoary, reverent, and religious man, 468

Aristoteles non vidit verum in spiritualibus, 188

Asmund and Cornelia, 56

But wondered at the strange man's face, 468

C est un verre qui luit, 213

Cibus hi mihi et potus sunt, 188

Quotations :

Comptus et calamistratus, 188

Contra negantem principia non est disputandum,

188, 437

Crime enough is there in this city dark, 388 De mea fide tota patria loquitur, 188 De omni scibili, 188

Death could not a more sad retinue find, 468 Defectus naturae, error naturae, 188 Deorum sunt omnia, 188 Don't shoot, he is doing his best, 9 Down, little flutterer, 87 Dumb jewels often in their silent kind, 168 Enough if something from our hands have power,

190

Everything that grows, 428, 474 Exemplis erudimur omnes aptius, 188 Favete, Musae prassides, 188 Flowers are the alphabet of angels, 228 Frigent nunc-dierum praecepta, 188 G-od give us peace ! 190 He deigns His influence to infuse, 468 He is a being of deep reflection, 448 He who knows not, and knows that he knows not,

167, 235, 277 His [Homer's] scolding heroes, and his wounded

gods, 468

How long ? How soon will they upbraid ? 468 I asked of Time for whom those temples rose, 297 I expect to pass through, 247, 316, 355, 433 Ibi incipit fides, ubi, desinit ratio, 188 Ignoratio causarum mater erroris, 188 In matters of commerce, 469 In minimum naturale dabile, 188 In some old night of time, 168 Invitat ultro te domus ipsa, 188 Laus sequitur fugientem, 188 Litera scripta manet, 188, 297 Live and take comfort, 168, 217 Lost in a convent's solitary gloom, 67 Me tenet ut viscus et interficit ut basilicus, 188 (Midas) qui fame peribat quod auro vesci

nequibat, 188 Mine eyes are made the fools o' the other senses,

168

Multis annis jam transactia, 56 My Lord the Sun, 126, 193 My master, old Pant, he fed me with pies, 266 My mind to me a kingdom is, 488 Natura semper intendit quod est optimum, 188 Natura vult omne grave ferri deorsum, 188 Nee in ceteris est cantrarium reperire, 188 Nescit servire virtus, 188 Nil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu, 188,

297

No dying brute I view in anguish here, 468 No endeavour is in vain, 428, 474 No man is a better merchant, 406 Not all who seem to fail, 8 Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail, 168 O beata solitudo, o sola beatitude, 188 O broad and smooth the Avon flows, 520 O flexanima flosque feminarum, 188 O what a tuneful wonder seized the throng, 468 Ohne Phosphor kein Gedanke, 248, 335 Oves et boves et cetera pecora campi, 188, 297, 437