Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 4.djvu/560

 554

INDEX.

Notes and Queries, Jan. 27, 1912

Portrait of a lady at Hampton Court, her name

505

Portraits of Broadbent families, 1650-1800, 530 Post Office Savings Bank, its Jubilee, 423 Postage stamps, perforation of, 197, 298 Prayer, daily, used in House of Commons, its

author, 38 Precedence at Court of wife of Privy Councillor,

388 Preston (John), D.D, c. 1630, list of his works, 308,

370 Price (Dr. William) and revival of Druidic cult,

230, 273

' Prick of Conscience,' its author, 1.1, 73 Pridden (J.), bookseller, on St. Bride's Religious

Society, 448

Printing* unpublished MS. on, 1762, 388 Prior (Matthew), poet, his birthplace, 161 Prior (Matthew) of Long Island, c. 1668, 447 Prison, King's Bench, Southwark, debtor's life

in, 410

Prisoner at Plumpton, Sussex, history of, 389 " Privet," etymology of the word, 46 Process block and wood engraving, 289, 413 Procter (B. W.), " Barry Cornwall," autograph

verses by, 48 Profane swearing, public reading of the Act

against, 386

Proofs seen by Elizabethan authors, 86 Prose, metrical and rhythmical, 426
 * Progress of Error,' poem, the author of, 389

Proverbs and Phrases:

All my eye and Betty Martin, 207, 254, 294,

313, 377

All my eye and Tommy, 207, 254 All who love me, follow me, 426, 494 As dark as a stack of black cats, 287 As sure as God made little apples, 289, 377 Beat as Batty, 250, 314 Bed of roses, 126, 176, 216 Broken counsellor, 1709, 368, 458, 496 Busy as Batty, 250, 314 Castle in the air, or in Spain, 66, 113, 178,

259

Every Irishman has a potato in his head, 209 Fine flower of poetry, 430 Folish babeling, 408, 475

Happy the country whose annals are dull, 68 Harp struck by lightning, 449, 498 His beake greater than his wingrf, 69 In spite of his teeth, 267

J'y suis, j'y reste, 44, 94, 155, 197, 252, 294 Make a long arm, 44, 118, 158, 215, 498 Our incomparable Liturgy, 248 Paint the lion, 109

Put that in your pipe and smoke it, 207, 259 Riding the high horse, 490 Rydyng aboute of victory, 408, 474 Sabbath day's journey, 429 Scotch science, 250 Shoe her horse round, 387, 459 Strip and go naked, 366 Take a back seat, 7 Tea and turn out, 170, 235, 336 Tertium quid, 97 Think it possible that you may be wrong, 68,

Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner, 86,

136, 154, 236 Wait and see, 74, 157

Ware and Wadesmill worth half London, 167 Watching how the cat jumps, 106

Pugh (David), his pseudonym David Hughson,

70, 116, 198

Pugh (Edward), artist, c. 1793, 71, 116, 198 ' Punch,' Edward VII. in, as baby and boy, 64 ;

seventieth birthday commemoration, 81 Purcell (Daniel), organist, his biography, 368, 538 Purcell (Edward), organist, 368, 470, 514 Purvis surname, 290, 357 Pyke, Day, and Freeman families, 428 Pyke, Reeve, Day, and Sharpe families, 489 Pyke, Stuart, Freeman, Parry families, 164 Pyne (W. H.), his ' Wine and Walnuts,' 1823, 227

Quatre Bras, Capt. John Kynoch killed at, 348 " Quiddits," origin and meaning of the word,

424

" Quillets," origin and meaning of the word, 424 Quilon, monument to a dog, 49

Quotations :

[A] factious mouther of imagin'd wrongs, 109

A succession of falls, 228

Affection never to be weaned nor changed, 488

Al tuo martirio cupida e feroce, 209

All heaven and earth are still, though not in

sleep, 189, 276

Amurath to Amurath succeeds, 507 And Cottle, not he whom Alfred made

famous, 428, 496

And now a poet's gratitude you see, 113 And when he died, he left his lofty name, 109 Anglicus a tergo caudam gerit ; est pecus

ergo, 46

Any fool can annex, 449 Aux artistes qui n'ont pas brille, 328 Behold the fate of sublunary things, 309 But the rose's scent is bitterness, 428 Call it but pleasure, and the pill goes down,

488

Coughing in a shady grove, 103, 152, 276 Earth is less fragrant now, and heaven more

sweet, 428 Effigiem Christ! dum transis pronus honora,

28, 436

Envy, eldest born of Hell, 12 Fly /Honesty, fly, 408, 476 Give me the child untilhe is seven years old, 8 Go, litel book ! God send thee good passage,

34

Haud tibi spiro, 65, 198 I knew not what it was to die, 488 I would rather know less than know so much

that isn't so, 28, 114 If thou do ill, the joy fades, not the pains, 309,

356 In smoke thou'rt wisdom, and in snuff thou'rt

wit, 88

It chanced, Eternal, 329, 414, 476 It is not growing like a tree, 449, 516 Jesus Crist, and seynt Benedight, 243 Let this be held the Farmer's Creed, 6 Like flowers in mines, that never see the sun,

469

Man doth usurp all space, 449 M^priser 1'erreur, c'est vouloir l'homme, n'est-

il pas ? 149 Morn on the waters ! and purple and bright,

468

Morning arises, stormy and pale, 507 Move swiftly, sun, and fly a lover's pace, 28,

76 Multi ad sapientiam pervenire potuissent, 88,

295