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INDEX.

Notes ami Queries, Jan. 30, 1909.

Proverbs and Phrases :

As thick as inkle-makers, 186, 235

Better an old man's darling, &c., 310, 375

Breach of promise, 282, 374

Butter out of a dog's mouth, 387

Entente, Cordiale, 37, 178

Every mickle makes a muckle : misquotation, 286

Exceeding mercy, 282

Fit as a fiddle, 188

Full thoughts causes long parentises, 282

Give me old Englande, 282

Greate bodies have sloe notions, 282

I am in Pimlico with my feet, 403

It is the Mass that matters, 470

It 's of no consequence, 282

Liberte, Egalite, Fraternity 406

Like John-a-Duck's mare, 150

Lost tribe = the Scotch, 9

Making buttons, 13, 158

Man in the moon, 518

May Jemmy Johnson squeeze me, 309

Merry England, 88

Nae safe wading in unco waters, 133

Neither endure wine nor water, 282

Nether herre nor ther, 282, 374

Nose of wax, 437

O dear no ! 349, 395, 434. 516

Pimlico : Keep it in Pimlico, 402, 457, 514

Pouring oil on troubled waters, 200

Pro aris et focis, 310

Psychological moment, 488

Put the comether over him, 420

Right nowe, 282, 374

Sinews of war, 137, 218, 253, 297

Spit of his father, 220

Talk of the town, 282, 374

Tenir une queue de vache a la main, 188, 273

Torne withe wylde horsez, 281

What you but see when you haven't a gun, 38, 255

Where there 's muck there 's money, 13 Proverbs and popular phrases in collections of

MSS., 281, 374, 458

Provincial book-trade, British, 1641-67, 141 Proximo, early use of the expression, 447 Prussians as a national name, 407 Psalm cxvii. and Cromwell at battle of Dunbar,

268, 436

Psalmon (F.) on " A glutted tiger," &c., 388 Pseudonymous literature, authorities on, 81 Punch ' Exhibition, 327 Punishment, capital, in 18th cent., 289, 392 Punishment, military, bastinado in, 246, 355, 397 Punishment for high treason, 229, 314, 354 Purleigh and the Washington ancestry, 323 Puzzle, typographical, 186, 216 Pych= pitch, applied to weaver's reed, 248 Pym (John), his mother, 309 Quarter Sessions, immortality proclamation at,

Queen, Attorney-General to, holders of the office,

110, 170, 217 Querard (J. M.), his ' Supercheries litteraires

devolves,' 81

Quicks Wood, Clothall, and Earl of Salisbury, 308 Quillin (B. Lord M.) on Comte d'Antraigues, 152 Heraldry in Froissa,rt : pillow, 369 Waldock family, 78 Quinn (J. H.) on Don Saltero's Tavern, Chelsea,

Quivel (Peter), Bishop of Exeter, 30, 112, 215

Quotations :

A glutted tiger, mangling in his lair, 388

A poet's art, 188

A rope ! a rope ! to hang the Pope, 834,

434, 496 JEstivo nunquam conspectus Sydere Glaucus,

127, 270 Ah ! why shouldst thou be dead when

common men, 454

All wit doth but avert men from the road, 396 Ampliat setatis spatium sibi vir bonus, 108 And, half suspected, animate the whole, 28, 74 And he wandered away, 408 Another nymph, amongst the many fair, 156 As He guides the worlds like boats in a storm,

309

Atque illi primum sperare salutem, 127, 270 At sonitu ingenti putrem quatit ungula

campum, 127, 270 Attend when thou canst the funerals of thy

neighbours, 108

Away with the fonts in our churches, 108 Beaucoup de perspnnes voudraient savoir, 468 Because right is right, 510 Born of butchers, but of bishops bred, 348, 397 But not to one in this benighted age, 497 Castigat ridendo mores, 126 Come, gentle Sleep ! attend thy votary's

prayer, 17 Contemplate the spectacle of life with appro

priate emotions, 247, 295 Continuus aspectus minus verendos magnos

homines, 127, 270, 356 Cum modo Frigoribus premitur, 127, 270 Dust thou art, to dust returnest, 272 England : Greatest King of England was

born not at Windsor, but at Huntingdon,

268, 314

Ergo ubi lapsa jacent sua quisque, 127, 270 Esse praestantem aliquam seternamque natu-

ram, 127, 270

Est bene non potuit dicere, dixit, erit, 374 Et certamen habent Isethi, quse viva sequatur,

127, 270

Even the gods cannot alter the past, 247, 295 Festinare nocet, nocet et cunctatio seepe, 507 First from the shadow on the wall, 446 Fluctum enim totius Barbarise ferre, 127, 270 For nearly five years the present ministry, 468 For the shame of Aspromonte, 247 From what small causes great events, &c., 510 God protect the public good, 134 Great fleas have little fleas, 380 Guests of the ages, at To-morrow's door, 28 Guy ! Guy ! Guy ! stick him up on high,

384, 434, 496

Habacuc est capable de tout, 268, 314 Hsec Celebratio non omninodissimilis,127, 270 Keeper, peeper, chimney-sweeper, 12 Here and here did England help me, 68 He which drinketh well sleepeth well, 511 His end was peace, 450 Hoc iter manifesta rotse vestigia cernes, 128,

270

Hinc venti dociles resono, 126 I cannot see the veiled face of Success, 268 I care not who writes the book that has a

good index, 469

I launch my bark on a wide, wide sea, 389 I sing the hymn of the conquered, 356 Idols of the market-place, 129, 173 Hie penes Persas Magus, 127