Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 8.djvu/651

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 25, 1908.

INDEX.

543

Proverbs and Phrases :

Moral courage, 229, 296

Mors janua vitae, 231, 334, 456

Narrow between the shoulders, 349

Neither my eye nor my elbow, 7, 137, 254

Nit behamey, 46, 135

Nom de guerre, 248, 356

Norn de plume, 248. 356

Nose of wax, 228, 274, 298

Pale-faced Simeon, 310

Passive resister, 37, 316

Point of war, 8, 96, 195, 313

Politica del carciofo, 290

Keligion of all sensible men, 1 80

Rubbed him down with an oaken towel, 369, 436

Sham Abraham, 293, 395, 477

Silly sixties, 429

Sincke of Popery, 387

Somersetshire dialect, 248

Sow an action, reap a habit, 40

Tell tales out of school, 55

Till the cows come home, 507

Top the candle, 347

Toujours perdrix, 55, 136, 215

With full swinge. 349

Yeoman service, 89

Prunty=Bronte, origin of the surname, 270 Prynne (William), his MSS. inquired after, 168 Public speaking in Shakespeare's day, 130, 415 Publisher, music, earliest British, 369, 475 Publishers, London book, c. 1807, 286 Pulle or maste in Caxton's ' Fables of JEsop," 206 Pulpit, clergyman with battledore in, 450 Pulpits, English, books on, 469 Pulpits, old, their removal, 467 Punch, the beverage, 520 Punchbowl of Lowestoft ware, arms on, 488 Punctuation : in MSS. and printed books, 222 ; in

reprints, 346, 457

Purim token, 1796 : Cabbage Society, 368, 413 Puttick & Simpson's, auctioneers, the firm, 363 Pyke or Pike families of London and Greenwich, 44 Q. (A. N. ) on earliest British music publisher, 369

Treloar (Sir W.) and B. L. Farjeon, 333 Quadrant colonnade, its sale in 1848, 66 Quarrell (W. H.) on Covesea Caves, Newport, Essex,

27, 368

Quattrocento, use and meaning of the word, 189, 258 Quentin (Mrs.), and Georgian notabilities, 230, 277 Quick (R.) on Chatterton portrait, 309 Quotations :

All quiet along the Potomac, 40

And custom lie upon thee with a weight, 32

And such a yell was there, 428, 475, 517

And while the priest did eat, 388

Apples of Sodom and grapes of Gomorrah, 109

Be sure to butter your bread on both sides, 210

Beware of the lust of finishing, 251

Beyond the Alps lies Italy, 109, 475

Buxtona, quse calidae celebraris, 69, 332

Croyez-moi, moii fils, 297

Das Leben geliebt und die Krone gekiisst, 269, 374

Denn was verschmerzte nicht der Mensch ? 297

Did I but propose to embark with thee, 32

Feltria perpetuo niveum damnata rigore, 69, 332

Quotations :

Femina dux facti, fact! dux femina, 109, 517

Fighting like devils for conciliation, 440

From youth to age, whate'er the game, 388, 434

Have you not heard love is more fierce, 388

He read the lessons twice on Sunday last, 230,

273

" I am Lycidas," said he, 388 I have squandered, 327, 374 I would ail men were free, 347, 374 I would rather trust and be deceived, 1 69 I would the sun should shine, 230 In old Norse ballad have I heard, 150 King David was King David, 236 Kitty, a fair but frozen maid, 48 Leave me not wild and drear, 488 Les grandes douleurs sont muettes, 169 Listen ! the mighty Being is awake, 466 Lo ! where Belial moves across the Hall, 272 "Millions for defence, but not a cent," 500 Moonless stars, 488

Morn, evening came ; the ocean smiled, 428 My heart beat wildly, and I woke, 428, 475 Near barren fields, where honour dwells, 75 Night with her train of stars, 327, 374 Non olet (pecunia), 64

O Man ! hold thou on in courage of soul, 428 Oh, mortal man, thou that art born in sin, 388 Oh, not with gloomy brow severe, 450 On joue & ce jeu charmant, 6.5 Pinnacled dim in the intense inane, 347, 374 Portantur avari, 109 Quseris quo victu Cornubia gaudeat ? 195 Keligion of all sensible men, 180 See how false Belial struts across the Hall, 169 See, the ship in the bay is riding, 269 Sow an action, reap a habit, 40 Soyez comine un oiseau, 90 Sufferance is the badge of all our tribe, 240 The heart desires, 449 The heart two chambers hath, 32 The King of France and four thousand men, 235 The orthodox said it came from the air, 388, 434 The other was for me, 428 The toad beneath the harrow knows, 48, 134 The trout dart down, 249 The virtue lies in the struggle, 150, 236, 272 There all those joys insatiably to prove, 388 There is so much bad in the best of us, 508 These beauteous forms, 347, 374 Think clearly, feel freely, bear fruit well, 109, 153 Think truly, and thy thoughts, 153 'Tis hard if all is false that I advance, 508 'Tis said, by men of deep research, 230 To her rich language blocks of purest ore, 169 To object is always easy, 230 Tons les blondins chez moi vont ;X l'6cole, 47 Truth heals the wound, 251 Tu cole justitiam, teque atque alios manet ultor,

289, 454

'Twas morn, and on the mountain top, 231 Walking in style by the banks of the Nile, 32 We think at first that home is heaven, 251 What will ye with them, earthly men, 450 Where his cathedral huge and vast, 230 Where the wild hare kindles, 109, 163