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 NINTH SERIES.

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215. Rummer, its etymology, iii. 238. ' Serjeant Bell and his Raree-Show,' x. 126. Smoking a cobbler, viii. 312. Somerville William), xi. 395. Songs, old, viii. 352. "Swift's starling," x. 451. Thackeray (W. M.), his speeches, xii. 130; his moustache, 357. Way (Gregory Lewis), ix. 128 Jerry-build : jerry-built, vii. 305 Jersey, crying " Haro ! Haro ! Haro ! " in, xii. 126,

272, 412, 496

Jerusalem, St. Agnes at, iv. 309 ; discoveries at, ix. 126 Jervis (Sir Humphrey), Lord Mayor of Dublin, i. 31 Jervois (Samuel), c. 1652, his descent, xi. 89 Jesse (John Heneage) and George Selwyn, vii. 122,

178, 274 Jessel(F.) on bezique, xi. 115. Haslam (Percival),

xii. 506. Rout, xii. 291 Jessica, Jewish female name, x. 246 Jesso = the shore, island north of Japan, v. 88, 191 Jesson (G.) on Moat's ' Stenography,' ix. 29 Jesuit divine, saying attributed to, i. 308 Jesus, his birth, i. 5, 174 ; iv. 82, 136 ; his por- traits, i. 107, 234 ; smallness of the infant, ix. 149, 297 ; saying attributed to, by Philoxenus, 326; miraculous likenesses at Tiberias and Berithus, ix. 481; x. 73 ; represented as an infant at the breast, xii. 29, 115, 291, 435, 495; alleged letter from Theodorus, 405 ; fish a symbol of, 291, 390, 406 " Jesus' Tree," Sir Thomas More's, ii. 348 Jetsam, earliest use of the word, viii. 501 Jeu d'esprit, v. 167 ; vi. 392 Jeune (Lady) on old feudal rights, &c., vii. 247 Jew, the Wandering, and Buddhist legend, iv. 121,

166 ; and Chinese version, v. 333 Jew and Israelite, use of the words, vii. 86 Jew of York attacked by Richard Malebisse, 1190, xii.

225 Jewers (A. J.) on Bath Abbey arms, viii. 221 ;

Hoadley and Warton, xi. 108 Jewish actors, vii. 289 Jewish antiquities at Lincoln, iv. 24 Jewish architects in the Middle Ages, vii. 189 Jewish calendar, vi. 127, 238 Jewish charm, xi. 208, 293 Jewish engravers, early, xi. 88, 194 Jewish faith and Jean Paul Marat, xii. 88, 236, 357 Jewish fasts, vi. 346 Jewish Jesuits and Disraeli, iv. 498 Jewish money used for the subjugation of Ireland, iv,

263

Jewish recognition of tolerance, viii. 501 Jewish rites and Homer, ii. 525 ; iii. 269 Jewish weddings, breaking the glass at, xii. 46, 115

214, 337, 435

Jew's harp, references to, iii. 34, 473 Jews, covering at grace, i. 226 ; their method o reckoning hours, ii. 4 ; and bills of exchange, ii 466 ; iii. 94 ; and the Spartans, iii. 385 ; in Napo leon's army, v. 515; in England, viii. 138, 159, 179, 200 ; xi. 306 ; xii. 328 ; as "scientists" and physicians, viii. 205, 373; and patriotism, ix. 7; and the Supplement to the ' Encyclopaedia Britan nica,' x. 146 ; and eternal punishment, x. 229, 334 xi. 153 ; xii. 10, 193 ; supposed council in Hungary xii. 121 ; and the use of the name Lombard, 125 fables as to child-murder by, 446, 497

Tews, black, in India, iv. 68, 174, 234, 312 ; v. 33 Tews and Christians, compulsory costume for, viii.

521; ix. 157, 298 Jews' Walk, Sydenham, iii. 62 Jews' Way : Jews' Gate : Jews' Lane, &c., ix. 508 ;

x. 54, 137

Jibba, its etymology, ii. 282 Jingo : "By Jingo," i. 227, 276, 350, 411 Jingo as a political epithet, its origin, viii. 63 Jingoism, Italian, in 1591, x. 84 Jinnet : Jinted, horse-dealer's term, vi. 369, 456 Jinrikshas in France and England, xii. 431, 494 Jipper a joint, its meaning, v. 208, 295 ' Jiv, jiv, koorllka," Russian game, i. 126, 316 Joan of Arc, and an exploded tradition, i. 406 ; monu- ment at Orleans, 1458, 441, 462; and goddams, vii. 268, 355; her trial, 408, 472; statue at Domre'my, x. 306, 414

Job, a Mussulman legend of, vii. 63, 190, 296 Job, book of bibliography, xi. 248 Jockteleg= folding knife, its etymology, vi. 328 Jocole, its meaning, vi. 370 " Johannis, Beati, Passagium," xi. 509 'John Adroyns in the Devil's Apparel,' Oriental

analogue to, viii. 459 ' ' John-a-Duck's mare," iii. 90 'John Bull,' a newspaper, its history, v. 495 ; vi. 116,

157, 255, 353 John Canoe, its meaning, i. 426

John Company, " vii. 34 John of Gaunt at Markeaton, 1399, x. 129 John of Salisbury, quotation in ' Policraticus, ' xi. 511 John Rylands Library, iv. 326 " Johnian pigs," ix. 117 Johnsons. Boswell, 1901, vii. 285 Johnson= Master, x. 489 Johnson (C.) on leonines, xii. 249 Johnson (Elizabeth), her parents, i. 68, 237 Johnson (E. J. W.) on Lee's ' Life of Shakespeare,'

iii. 118

Johnson (Garret), sculptor in alabaster, xi. 127, 217 Johnson (H.) on designation of foreigners in Mexico, vii. 496; viii. 21. England with many religions and one sauce, ix. 472. Eulogies of the Bible by Huxley and Darwin, ix. 374, 476. Hearth-money, 1662-89, vii. 308. Stretwarde, viii. 385 Johnson (Isaac) antiquarian artist, iii. 109 Johnson (John), 1571-1625, his descendants, xi. 328 ;

xii. 53.

Johnson (Lionel), his death, x. 320 Johnson (Mary) on Jewish weddings, xii. 116. River

not flowing on the Sabbath, xii. 175 Johnson (Rev. Richard), first clergyman in Australia,

i. 207, 272, 278

Johnson (Robert), Sheriff of London, 1617, his bio- graphy, vii. 228, 313, 413 ; viii. 290, 448 Johnson (Dr. Samuel), his portrait by ZofFany, i. 186 ; monumental inscription in Boswell's ' Life,' i. 385, 409, 452 ; ii. 33 ; his residence in Bolt Court, i. 506 ; ii. 71, 132 ; his two books, ii. 87 ; dines off palfrey, ii. 245 ; and tea-drinking, ii. 265, 413 ; iii. 215, 272 ; his house at Frognal, iii. 228, 334, 415 ; as a Grecian, iv. 451, 545 ; v. 71, 213, 254 ; and Vestris, v. 24 ; his birthplace, 452, 505 ; his father and Elizabeth Blaney, vi. 6, 93 ; spelling of