Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 2.djvu/539

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 24, 1914.

SUBJECT INDEX.

533

Pragell family, 370

PresSj botanical, date of invention, 270

Print, coloured, of Bengal Horse Artillery, c. 1835,

489

Printers of Huntingdonshire, 44 Prisoners of war, French, their lace-making, 269 ' Pro and Con,' a journal, 1872 to 1873, 488 " Pro pelle cutem," motto of Hudson's Bay '

Company, 387, 453, 514

Proverb, Chinese, in Burton's ' Anatomy,' 189 Proverb, Hebrew or Arabic, 30, 115, 136, 215, 257

Proverbs and Phrases :

All Sir Garnet, 70, 117

As big as a Dunstable lark, 469, 515

As busy as Throp's wife, 468

At sixes and sevens, 190, 238

Austria the China of Europe, 170

Better give a landlord corn to feed his horse than hear his cock crow, 330

Camel that lost 'its ears seeking a set of horns, 30, 115, 136, 215, 257

Entente Cordiale, 47, 474

Felix quern faciunt aliena pericula cautum, 105

Fill the bill, 390

Hussein : To be treated like Khoja Hussein, 232, 278

Man's extremity is God's opportunity, 510

Men, women, and Herveys, 250, 334, 360

Miller of Huntingdon, 30, 115

Old Mother Damnable, 69

Our incomparable Liturgy, 97

Pull one's leg, 58, 158, 213

Quo vadis ? 34

Swell of soul, 170

Unconscious humour, 86 Plica, used in place-names, 15 Pudding Lane, old Ixmdon street, 469, 516 " Pull one's leg," origin of the slang phrase, 58,

158, 213

P-unetuation signs, origin of, 409 Pyrothonide, use of, in ancient medicine, 490

Quaker, allusiori to " the great Quaker," 429,

496

Quaker documents and records, 254 Quaritch (Bernard), MSS. collected by, 207, 336 Quarter-boys of Christ Church, Bristol, 105 Quartermaine family, 370, 470 Quebec, Highlanders at the taking of, 1759, 308,

354, 397, 434

Queen Square, Bloomsbury, statue in, 12, 430 Qxieenhoo Hall, origin of the name, 18 c Queens of England, Lives of,' error in, 266 " Queen's Trumpeter," the office of, 249, 311 " Quo vadis ? " origin of the phrase, 34

Quotations :

A clever fool is the worst of all, 170

A favourite theme of laborious dulness, 169,

214 A man may many frendes teine and ..-..,

50 Again she spoke : " Where is my lord the

king ? " 309 And buds of marjoram had stol'n thy hair,

169, 213, 237 And shall not this night with its long dismal

gloom, 37

Quotations :

As though his highest lot To plant the

Bergamot, 328, 398 Austria, the China of Europe, 170 Blundering and plundering Government,

170, 216, 255 British infantry is the best in the world,

428, 491 Call us not weeds, we are ocean's gay flowers,

129, 316

Gary, of whom Minerva stands in fear, 381 Castalia interdictus aqua, interdictus et igne

Pierio, 27

Cavllier fonduer a Amiens, 330 Cicero. . . .tested by the Christian standards,

269, 318

Claret with the odour of the violet, 170, 216 Come, follow, follow me, 247, 298, 396 Convictions can build cathedrals ; opinions

cannot, 407 Dat Galenus opes, fulvum dat Bartolus aurum,

37, 158

Deaf adder that stoppeth her ears, 6, 136 Drumms beate an onset ; let the Rebells feele,

327

Every man has his opportunity, 170 Farewell, vain world ! I 've had enough of

thee, 13, 55 Felix quern faciunt aliena pericula cautum,

105 Had the great Quaker been kept in power

instead of Pitt, 429, 496 Hsec sunt Norwycus, panis ordeus, halpeny-

pykys, 252 Hie tuus O Tamisine Pater Septemgeminus

fons, 148, 197 How happy the lover, how easy his chain,

349, 397

How oft in vain the son of Theseus said, 87 I am bound to furnish my antagonists with

arguments, 170, 255 I looked upon a sea, 8 If, pleas'd with your new tenement, your

breast, 456 If thou do ill, the joy fades, not the pains,

115, 417

Intest ine quarrels place an obvious lever, 8 J'ai accepte la guerre d'un cceur teger, 167 Jam respirat Anglia, sperans libertatern, 15 Led by our star.-!, what tracts immense we

trace ! 87 Let not thy table exceed the fourth part of

thy income, 69 Like the two Reynoldses, we have changed

sides, 50, 131

Man is immortal till his work is done, 136 Man's extremity is God's opportunity, 510 Men of light and leading, 170, 216 Mr. Metcalf ran off on meeting a cow, 10, 72 No one but a madman would throw fire- brands about, 55

O snuff, do thou my box abundant fill, 148 On to the breach, ye soldiers of the Cross,

309, 357 Once poor, my friend, still poor you must

remain, 87 Only those nations that behaved well to the

Jews prospered, 170

Pungent radish biting infant's tooth, 69, 136 Q\ii i'atetur per quern" pro feccrit, 169, 319 Remember, Christian soul, that thou hast

this day. 1 !'., 216