Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - General Index.djvu/245

 ELEVENTH SERIES.

237

Quotations :

America remained Carlyle's Carcassonne, vi

489

Amicus est Socrates, i. 463 Amurath to Amurath succeeds, iv. 507 An artist painted Time and Love, xii. 257

311

An Austrian army awfully arrayed, vi. 480 Ancestral masks, each in its little cedarn

chest, vi. 309, 434

And for all thee, vile yellow slave, xi. 340 And, before he heard, vii. 387, 434 And blind Orion, hungry for the morn, i. 269

316 And buds of marjoram had stol'n thy hair,

viii. 169, 213, 237 And Capel and Hurst, iii. 468 And Cottle, not he whom Alfred made famous,

iv. 428, 496 And elephant-like I had a cake put in my

trunk, ix. 249 And God did bless him if the prayers and

tears, iii. 348 ; v. 90, 154, 258 And hears the unexpressive nuptial song, vi.

328, 395, 476 And I still onward haste to my last night,

ix. 429 ; x. 57 And nine is striking by the chime, prime time,

ii. 487, 536 And nonsense shall be eloquence in love. iii.

468 And now a poet's gratitude you see, iii. 468 ;

iv. 113

And now my vacation is over, vi. 468 And of St. Brigets bowre, I trow, vii. 150, 231 And shall not this night with its long dismal

gloom, vii. 428 ; viii. 37 And summed the actions of the day, xii. 36 And sweet Nell of old Drury is Queen of the

May, xii. 99

And the gallery all started hissing, xi. 473 And this it is to have lived, xi. 210 And though they sleep in dungeons deep,

vii. 268

And visions, as poetic eyes avow, i. 269, 316 &.nd when he died, he left his lofty name, iv.

109 And where thy footstep gleams, ix. 511 ; x.

72

And enless significance lies in work, v. 230 Anger, which, far sweeter than trickling

drops of honey, ix. 188 Anglicus a tergo caudam gerit ; est pecus

ergo, iv. 46 An honest man and a good bowler, ix. 308,

372

An old man's dotage is an anecdotage, xii. 341 An ounce of enterprise is worth a pound of

privilege, i. 408, 455, 514 ; ii. 55 Any fool can annex, iv. 449 Approbation from Sir Hubert Stanley is

praise indeed, v. 189 April is in my mistress^face, xii. 379 Are you little gimlet holes, ix. 109 Arm of the Lord ! whose wondrous power

vii. 251 As aw hurried through t' tawn t' me wark,

v. 369

As body when the soul has fled, vii. 369 As it fell out upon a day, ii. 169

Quotations :

As I was walking all alone, I heard two

corbies, iii. 69

As I whirl and whirl, vi. 429 As long as idle dogs will bark, ix. 289 As the trees began to whisper and the wind

began to roll, ii. 488 As though his highest lot -To plant the

Bergamot, viii. 328, 398 As we journey through life, let us live by the

way,' iii. 228, 274, 313 Atque ego in summo oratore fingendo talem

informabo, x. 89, 217 At the muckin' o' Geordie's byre, ix. 429, 475,

514

Austria, the China of Europe, viii. 170 Aux artistes qui n'ont pas brille", iv. 328 Be sober, and learn to trust, v. 468 Be the day weary, be the day long, i. 49 Be thou happy, be thou kind, vi. 11 Beatitudo non est divinorum cognitio, ii. 229,

iii. 136 Beat on, proud billows, Boreas blow, ix. 201,

256, 296

Beauty is the lover's gift, i. 368 Before her face her handkerchief she spread,

i. 109, 197

Behold the fate of sublunary things, iv. 309 Behold ! the radiant Spring, ix. 429, 514 Behold ! ye tarts ! one moment spare the

text, x. 449, 498 Bernardus valles, colles Benedictus amabat,

v. 209, 313

Beside my dead I knelt in prayer, v. 169 Beware of the fury of a patient man, xi. 168,

217 Bibles with cuts and comments thus go

down, vii. 269 Bide thy time, vi. 189, 313 Bite again, and bite bigger, vi. 17, 94 Blest be the hour wherein I bought this book,

x. 170 Blundering and plundering Government,

viii. 170, 216, 255 Bolt from the blue, x. 448 Bolton with his bolt-in-tun, vii. 29, 95 Bonum est nos hie esse, v. 209 British infantry is the best in the world, viii

428, 491

But art Thou come, dear Saviour ? x. 129 But I a looking-glass would be, xi. 27 But Scripture saith, an ending to all fine

things must be, i. 368, 417 But the drum muttered " Come," x. 230, 276,

353

But the good deed through the ages, x. 148 But the rose's scent is bitterness, iv. 428 But what most showed the vanity of life, xii.

48, 109 By geometric scale, Doth take the size of pots

of ale, v. 290

Called aloud on Tully's name, i. 269, 317 Call him not old whose visionary brain, xii.

341 Call it but pleasure, and the pill goes down,

iv. 488 Call us not weeds, we are ocean's gay flowers,

viii. 129, 316

Cane mini et Musis, i. 464 Captives of thy bow and spear, iii. 29, 76