Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 2.djvu/679

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 28, 1905.

INDEX.

565

Quotations :

Every bird that sings, 208

Exemplis erudimur omnes aptius, 276

Genius is a promontory jutting out into the

infinite, 188, 295 Get up, M. le Comte, 208 Good news to those whose light is low, 528 Grsecum est, non potest legi, 281 Gram loquitur : dia verba docet, 281 Grant me, indulgent Heaven, 309, 434 Have you any religion ? None to speak of, 49 He saw a world in a grain of sand, 488 Her mother she sells laces fine, 260 Here 's to thee an' me an' aw on us, 10 Hilaris gens, cui libera mens, 388 Hoc habeo, quodcumque dedi, 460 I have this day practised the rule of life, 130, 477 I lighted at the foot, 347, 412, 535 Ibi incipit fides, 111 In adversities to compress murmur, 130 In all she did, 289 Inebriated with the exuberance of his own

verbosity, 67, 110 Ingeniosus in alienis malis, 130 Instinct is untaught ability, 49, 158 Jam mansueta mala, 130 Jesus Hominum Salvator, 106, 190 Laus sequitur fugientem, 276 Magnum vectigal est parsimonia, 326, 418 Man is immortal till his work is done, 20 Meditation is the science of the saints, 49 Mr. Pilblister and Betsy his sister, 408 Multis annis jam peractis, 476 My mind to me a kingdom is, 32 Natura semper intendit quod est optimum, 276 No man could be so wise as Webster [Thurlow"

looked, 407, 472

Nor billows roll nor wild winds blow, 149 Nothing is so stifling as perpetual symmetry, 188 Omnia mea desideria, labores omnes, 130 Omnis morbus contra romplexionatum, 130 Our bootless host of high-born beggars, 153 Pitt had a great future behind him, 49, 158 Rustica gens est optima flens, 405 Scientia non habet inimicum, 111 See how the grand old forest dies, 487 Sentis ut sapiens, loqueris ut vulgus, HO Si vis amari, ama, 281 Sic volo, sic jubeo, 380 Singing face, 87, 133 So when at last by slow degrees, 388 Stat crux dum volvitur orbis, 281 Sum similior ambigenti, 130 Tell me, my Cicely, why so coy, 428 The generations shall become weaker and wiser,38 The gratitude of a patient ispartof his disease, 38 The hectic flush had mounted its bloody flag, 38 The rule of the road 's an anomaly quite, 467 The tree of knowledge is not that of life, 540 The world 's a bubble, 407, 471 There are only two secrets a man cannot keep, 7 There is a lone, lone sea, 327 There 's not a crime, 14 This world is a good one to live in, 26 Though lost to sight, to memory dear, 345 Transeat hoc quoque inter fugacia bona, 130

notations :

Turpe mori post te solo, 281

Two constant lovers joined in one, 289

Ubi lapsus, quid feci ? 281

Virtue is Peregrina in terris, 130

Vivit post funera virtus, 276, 281, 351

Vox, et praBterea nihil, 281

Wave may not foam, 149, 276

When she was good, she was very, very good,

528

Whose changing mound and foam, 9 Will your pulse quicken ? 388 With mind unwearied still will I engage, 308 1. on Margaret Biset, 71 K. (A. F.) on link with the past, 286

Tea as a meal, 17 R. (D. M.) on Hand, 493 R. (F. H.) on ' Tracts for the Times,' 398 I. (J. F.) on bathing-machines, 130 'Decameron,' 396 Tenth sheaf, 493 Winter (Rev. Richard), 412 U. (N. E.) on spirit manifestations, 388 ft. (P. N.) on Markham's Spelling- Book, 494 R. (W. F.) on rarison : scrivelloes, 452 Radcliffe (A. N.) on heraldic, 408 Radford (W. L.) on Sir Walter 1'Espec, 513 Railways, their influence on pronunciation, 36 Ram, black, riding the, 173 Ramie, its growth and manufacture, 12, 94 Ramsay (Allan), authorship of ' Hardyknute,' 386*
 * Ralph Koister Doister,' peculiar poetry in, 182

425, 536

Ranee (A. K.) on Acqua Tofana, 353 Randolph (J. A.) on martyrdom of St. Thomas, 31

Refectories, first-floor, 237 Randolph (T.), ' Jealous Lovers ' acted at St. Alban's-

Grammar School, 126 Ratcliffe (T.) on Bradlaugh medal, 348 Bringing in the Yule ' ' clog," 507 Broom squire, 198

Christmas carols : waits : guisers, 504 Conditions of sale, 269 'Dukery Becords,' 126 Jersey wheel, 208 Pin witchery, 205 Psalm-singing weavers, 194 Rules of Christian life, 335 Ravison, meaning of the word, 227, 292, 452 Raye, meaning of the word, 368 Rayner (R.) on American Order of the Dragon, 412.' Raynolds (T.) physician, c. 1545, 88, 377 Read (F. W.) on pelican myth, 430 Read (Katharine), d. 1779, portrait painter, 522 Reade (A. L.) on Mary Shakespeare, 94 Reade (Charles), his grandmother, 344 " Reaper Death, the great," 146 Red Cross on Bunney, 115 Reduce, earliest military use, 266 Refectories, first floor, 167, 237, 353 Reggio (Pietro), Shadwell's eulogium, 270 Reichel (0. J.) on Tides well and Tideslow,"95

Woffington, 174 Relton (F. H.) on Mary Carter, 513

Duchess Sarah, 211, 372, 414, 494 Remus, Uncle, in Tuscany, 183, 276