Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 1.djvu/539

 Notes and Queries, July 29, 1916.

SUBJECT INDEX.

533

Quotations :

Astronomus exosus ad unam mulieres, 429

Aue duum puerorum, 4, 40, 56

Caesar gloriosus es, 165

Citizens of no mean citizenship, 100

Could but our tempers move like this

machine, 150, 256 Dat Galenus opes, dat Justinianus honores

285 Dat veniam corvis, vexat Censura columbas,

47

Die to the old, live to the new, 310 Duncan's horses, 180 Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani, 70, 234 Every mythos contains a logos, 247, 334 Fat, fair, and forty, 10, 53, 97, 355 Go 'cruit me Cheshire and Lancashire, 124,

176 Government for the people, of the people, by

the people, 127, 197 Greatest of losses on the lone peak slain of

Alp-like virtue, 428 Hard blew the wind, and far as eye could

strain, 268 He who gives his life for king and country,

510

He whom Dejanira. . . .Wrapp'd in the en- venomed shirt, 488 I climbed the dark brow of the mighty

Hellvellyn, 448 I know Thee, who hast kept my path, and

made, 117

I lay me down to sleep, 228 If the heart of a man is depress'd with cares,

327, 397

Imagination boggles at, 428, 473 In short measure Life may perfect be, 369, 412 Instead of useful works, like Nature's, grand,

467 It's a sense of renovation, of freshness, and of

health, 449 It is never the loving that empties the heart,

228, 292 It may be for years, and it may be for ever,

327, 396

John Smith was a navvy strong and, 38, 59 Lobster " the Cardinal of the Deep," 389 Lone in my room, my eyes are dim, 369 Love is not a plant that grows in the dull

earth, 147, 216

Magic of property turns sand to gold, 389, 437 Man is immortal till his work is done, 388,

438, 517

Now Barabbas was a publisher, 120 Now welcome Whitsuntide was come, 369, 432 O beata solitude, O sola beatitude, 506 O name of God ineffable, 69 Oh, that we two were maying, 400 Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud ?

Only a dream of the days gone by, 209, 292 Our deeds still travel with us from afar, 448 Our God and soldier we alike adore, 369, 432,

473 Plura mala nobis contingunt quam accidunt,

269, 315

Pompa mortis magis terret, 338 Poor sinners below, acquainted with woe, 148

Pour out all as plain, 348, 414

St. George for Merrie England ! 348

Scribenda et legenda, 349

She would rather he should die, 247

Quotations :

Silent and clear thro' yonder peaceful vale, 10 Softly, oh, softly glide, 310 Spiritus non potest habitare in sicco, 490 Spring in the North is a child that wakes from

dreams of death, 29 The beauty of the house is order, 208 The dogs of war are straining at the leash,

209

The insupportable fatigue of thought, 428 The most unhappy man of men, 428, 495 Then asked I, " What of Home ? Shall she

abide ? " 50

There are no dead, 348, 432 ' They tell upon St. Bernard's Mount, 448 Things that Fate fashions or forbids, 127 This ae nighte, this ae nighte, 268 This world is but a throughfare full of woe,

428, 495 Those that are perfect men do not easily give

credit to every tale, 428 Titulo dignatus equestri, 135 Too quick a sense of constant infelicity, 69,

117

Violet of a legend, 327 Wake! Wake to the hunting! 288, 340 We say it for an hour, or for years, 29, 117 When Duty whispers low, " Thou must,"

310 When England's wronged and danger's nigh,

369, 432, 473 When I die The name of England may be

found, 288

When the wolf in nightly prowl, 369 When to the flowers so beautiful the Father

gave a name, 228

Where shall England find her own? 467 Whilst on his switch-tail'd bay, with wander- ing eye, 212

Who saw life steadily and saw it whole, 428 Wondrous are these Hearts of Men, 369 Zyma vetus expurgetur, 229, 296, 337

Babbit, a reputed Norman introduction' to our

country, 154, 235, 317, 394, 438 Babsey, origin of the Christian name, 486 Radcliffe family of Leigh and the Fazakerley

family, 288, 395, 489 Bailway, Underground, of the United States, 1863,

125 Bain, caused by heavy gunfire, 10, 56, 96, 170, 337 ;

and geese, common belief, 227 Bamsay (Allan), his 'Stanzas to Mr. David

Malloch' and 'Tea-Table Miscellany,' 109,

175 Bamsey (Alexander), his poem on the Biver Brent,

447 Banby (J.), F.B.S., Serjeant-surgeon, his mother,

428, 473 Bann (Bev. J.), b. 1732, d. 1811, his parentage,

510

Bats, their dislike to toads, 53 Becruiting for Agincourt, 1415, 124, 176 " Bed earth " as foundations for houses, 19 Bede (Brianus de), c. 1139, his descendants, 329,

417

Begimental loving-cup of 14th Hussars, 229, 314 Begimental nicknames in use, 1916, 30, 74, 138,

159