Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/145

 NINTH SERIES.

137

Hunter Street, Brunswick Square, notable residents

in, vi. 285, 378 ; Ruskin's house in, x. 192 Hunting field, scarlet worn in, iv. 48, 96, 137 Huntley (Rev. George), rector of Stourmouth, Kent,

11. 88

Huntley (T.) on helpmate and helpmeet, ii. 311. " On " or " upon " in place-names, i. 296

Hurd (Dr. Richard), his edition of Cowley's select works, 1772, x. 1.

Hurd ( W.), his ' History of all Religions,' viii. 288

Hurgin, its etymology and meaning, v. 87, 213, 274

Hurry =staith, v. 107, 217 ; vi. 70

Hurry-carry. See Harry-carry.

Hurst (H.) on the name Oxford, iii. 309. Place- names, iii. 177. Sibyls in Scotland, iii. 194

Hurstwood, Spenser's Lancashire home, iii. 481 '

Hurtling, use of the word, vi. 48, 175, 371, 492

Husbands, two, following wife to grave, ii. 266

Hussar, its etymology, iv. 67, 251

Hussars (18th), 1821, officers of the, x. 488 ; xi. 56, 235

Hussey (A.) on Aiscoughe ( Askew) =Spraclinge, xi. 467. Apulderfield family, i. 147. Archband roof, xi. 27. Bekesbourne, Kent, iii. 13. Berth = to lay down floor-boards, vii. 505. Canterbury records, ix. 498. Carter (Rev. Robert), ii. 149. Carter (Rev. Walter), ii. 148. Childbed pew, ii. 5 ; x. 373. Chingford old church, v. 113. Clifford and Braose families, v. 355; vi. 75. "Compass window": "compass ceiling," x. 329. Courtenay (Arch- bishop), his burial-place, iv. 251. Cromwell and Christmas, iii. 495. Cundy family, Kent, viii. 44. Deaneries, rural, viii. 64. Epitaphs, ii. 537. Flower (Rev. John), ii. 8. Fotherby (Rev. Francis), iv. 479. " Foy Boat," iii. 457. Gad's Hill, vi. 286. Garland, new sense, vi. 245; vii. 45. Harris (Rev. Christopher), ii. 249. Hooker (Rev. Richard), viii. 522. Huntley (Kev. George), ii. 88. Isaac family of Kent, viii. 124. Kentish plant-name, v. 441. King's Langley Priory, ii. 129. Latin motto, vii.

12. Lig-dewes, its meaning, vi. 429. London (Bishop of), his funeral, vii. 231. Lynch (Sir Thomas), i. 7. Master family, ii. 178. Mennes (Sir Matthew), iv. 289. More (Rev. William), iii. 108. Mummy peas, iv. 252. Nelson (Rev. Nathaniel), i. 467. Ospringe Domus Dei, Kent, viii. 185. Pack, its meaning, viii. 144 ; ix. 496. Paddy persons, xii. 153. Parkhurst (Rev. Henry), ii. 329. Parver alley, its meaning, viii. 325. Paw- son (Rev. Thomas), ii. 469. Pett (Phineas), xi. 516. "Pillage, stallage, and toll," viii. 420. Plessy College, Essex, viii. 104. Polder : Loophole, v. 258. Portall or screen, vii. 425. Powell (Sir John), ii. 189. Pulpit in the chapter-house, x. 347. Quakers in Kent, x. 246. Reade family, v. 175. Rent paid at a tomb in church, viii. 302. Rogers (Kev. Simon), ii. 69. St. Eanswyth, virgin saint, v. 74. St. Nicholas (Thomas), v. 187. School teachers in Kent, 1578-1619, vii. 3. Seasalter, ix. 189. Shakespeare and Lord Burleigh, xii. 478. Silver taster, xii. 288. Smith's Folly at Dover, iv. 34. Stool-ball, x. 486. Sunday morning service, its hour, x. 213. Swaylecliffe, ix. 329. Tapster, early use of the word, vi. 327. Tayntynge, x. 207. Thomas (Rev. Timothy), ii. 528. Thurbane (John), v. 109. Tressher, x. 47. Vallavine (Kev. Peter)

i. 447. Wakerell bell, viii. 405. Wassail-bread : wassail-land, x. 27. Wyatt family, ii. 352

Hussey (Col. Thomas), 1708 P.C.C., x. 269

lussey (Thomas), old bellringer of Leigh, iv. 185, 271

ilussey (Thomas), of London, 1715, vi. 106

lutchins (B. L.) on parish and other accounts, iv. 301, 414, 452 ; v. 64

lutchinson (J.) on Nicholas Bacon of Brussels, xii. 429. Columbarium in church tower, xii. 113. Fable as to child-murder by Jews. xii. 497. Gentlier as a comparative adverb, vii. 468. Green Crise or Cryse, viii. 511. Hoyarsabalof Cubiburu,xi.287,396. London libraries in the Elizabethan era, ix. 414. Rene=a small watercourse, ix. 435. Rudyerd (Sir Benjamin), ix. 456. School library in the seven- teenth century, xii. 472. " Travailler pour le Roi de Prusse," xii. 455. Wordsworth, allusion in, vii. 232, 438

lutchinson (T.) on biography, how it is written : the 'D.N.B.,' x. 506. Broken on the wheel, vi. 455. Coleridge, and Young, iv. 42 ; and entomology, 478 ; his ' Christabel,' x. 388, 430, 489 ; xi. 116, 170. " Dies creta notandus," iv. 12. Green an unlucky colour, ix. 234. "Hill me up," iii. 436. " Hop the twig," ix. 314. " Not half," x. 471. Prodigal Son as Sir Charles Grandison, x. 487. Shakespeariana, iv. 142. Siege of Troy, iii. 453. " Sithence no fairy lights," x. 127. Thackeray's Latin, iii. 409. Yeed or Yeedith, iii. 456

Hutten and Hiitter families and arms, i. 313, 415

Button (A. W.) on Sir George Aldrych, iii. 208. Wollaston family arms, ii. 429

Button (S. F.) on style of archbishops, i. 389

Huxley (T.) as a reviewer, ix. 168, 338 ; his eulogy of the Bible, 328, 374, 432, 476

Huzzar, or hussar, its etymology, iv. 67, 251

Hwfa family of Wales, i. 289, 411

Hyde (Edward), first Earl of Clarendon, his parent- age, viii. 384 ; and Mr. Secretary Morice, xii. 182

Hyde (Henry), second Earl of Clarendon, his * Diary,' vi. 269

Hyde (H. B.) on Miss Linwood's picture galleries, ii. 512. Roman numerals, iii. 90 ; iv. 151

Hyde family, i. 429, 515

Hyde Park, monolith with cup-markings in, vii. 69, 115, 195, 292 ; viii. 448

Hymns :

" Adeste, fideles," its composer, xi. 287

"And now, O Father," ii. 187, 258, 295

Edward VII., hymn on his birth, x. 1, 30

Guardian Angel, v. 210

" Hail, Queen of Heaven," v. 28, 154

Horsham Church, hymn-book used in, viii. 523

Hume (Duncan), his hymn-book, i. 308

' Hymns Ancient and Modern,' errors in, viii.

101, 230, 388 ; ix. 36 ; new edition, x. 432,

512 ; xi. 77, 176

" Jesus, I cast my soul on Thee," ii. 369, 495 " Lord, whose temple once did glisten," xi. 308,

473

Luther (Martin), xi. 506 Malabarian, its title, viii. -104 " Nearer, my God, to Thee,"i. 363 " Now I lay me down to sleep," ii. 67, 197