Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/224

 216

GENERAL INDEX.

Quotations :

A ship came sailing o'er the sea, vii. 330

A smile of laat year's sun, vi. 108

Adieu, canaux, canards, canaille ! i. 89

After life's fitful fever, xi. 220

After wearisome toil and much sorrow, x. 149

Ah ! judge her gently who so deeply loved ! xi.

369, 412 Ah ! pourquoi 1'amitie gfmiirait elle encore ?

iv. 308

Ah ! why did I so late Thee know ? ii. 398 Alas ! that I so lately knew Thee, ii. 309, 398 All the flowers were in their pride, xii. 389 All roads lead to Rome, vii. 427, 511 All tears are vain, x. 367 Amours. See Mais on revient. An antique stone, the relics spared by old decay,

v. 317 And helped his party for his country's weal,

iv. 499

And Judgment at the helm was set, vii. 90, 398 And snatching, as they \sc. the years] go, vii.

110, 198 And still beneath the caverns dread, iv. 518 ;

v. 51

And the night shall be fill'd with music, vii. 440 And though these lines should only line port- manteaus, x. 474

And visions, as poetic eyes avow, vii. 388 And when with envy Time transported, ii. 147 Anglorum Regi scripsit schola tota Salerna, iii.

469 ; iv. 98 Anser, apis, vitulus, populos et regna gubernant,

xii. 506

Armada (in Bacon), viii. 423, 508 As if some sweet engaging grace, i. 429 As the D 1 was marching o'er Britain's fair

isle, ix. 449

Ask nothing more of me, sweet, i. 389 Asmund and Cornelia, xii. 468 Avoid extremes and shun the fault of such, ix. 389 Backward, turn backward, ii. 7, 72, 138 Battle over, sleep in clover, vii. 8 Beats the strong heart, vii. 8 Beaucoup de personnes voudraient savoir, mais

peu d6sirent apprendre, x. 127; xii. 138 Beautiful feet are those that go, iii. 28 Beauty out of favour and on crutches, vii. 388 Before the highest Jupiter of all, xi. 106 Behind each cloud the sun is always shining, x.

309, 455

Behold this ruin ! 'tis a skull, i. 229, 394 Better to have loved and lost, vii. 125, 236 Better to leave undone than by our deed, i. 129,

198, 518

Bid day stand still, v. 497 Blood he had view'd, vii. 8, 292 Boys flying kites haul in their white-winged

birds, ii. 389

But ah ! Maecenas is yclad in claye, x. 149, 251 But should fortune fill your sail, xii. 49, 155 But this I know, xi. 449 Call us not weeds, x. 360 Calm contemplation and poetic ease, vii. 388 Cambuscan bold, iii. 108, 157, 318

Quotations :

Cane decane canas, xii. 385, 478

Care, vale, sed non aeternum, care, valeto, x. 48

Carnage is God's daughter, ii. 309, 398 ; iii. 37

Ce qu'a nos jardins sont les fleurs, vi. 9

Celia is sick, xi. 208

C'est que je vois les flots sombres, x. 347

C'est que 1'enfant, xii. 350

Cette longue et cruelle maladie qu'on appelle la

vie, vii. 497

Christus, si non Deus, non bonus, i. 329 Coelo tegitur qui non habet urnam, iii. 149 Coin is the sinews of war, x. 307, 356 Cold water is the best of drinks, vii. 90, 198 Comes, at times, a stillness as of even, viii. 144 ;

ix. 76 Cometa apparente, creduntur imminere comitia,

viii. 104

Comme le limagon, ii. 529 j iii. 93 Comprendre, c'est pardonner, xi. 224 Conjugis haud immemor desideratissimi, ix. 440 Conscious of Marsala's worth, i. 289 Conservons le chaos, iii. 347 Credat Judaeus Apella, vii. 240 Crescit amor nummi quantum ipsa pecunia crescit,

.vi. 190, 426

Cruel of heart were they, bloody of hand, xii. 88 Cui pudor et justitiae soror, xii. 269 Cum rerum natura nusquam magis, ix. 131 Cum talis sis, utinam noster esses, iv. 184 Cunning, like a skilful miner, iv. 517 De male quaesitis vix gaudet tertius haeres, vii.

74, 170 Delivered from the galling yoke of time, xi. 369,

412, 511

Does this become a soldier? v. 109, 219 Dies creta notandus, iii. 48, 194 ; iv. 12 Distinct, but distant clear, but oh how cold!

xi. 170, 211

Droppings of warm tears, ix. 320 D'un chien, ou d'un rat, x. 208, 250 Each word-catcher, that lives on syllables, ix. 318 Early, bright, transient, chaste as morning dew,

i. 109

Earthly cavern, to thy keeping, iv. 287 England a country of many religions and only

one sauce, ix. 407 England will never fall, iv. 288 Esprit d'escalier, i. 267 Est quidam usus mendaciorum, xi. 466 Est rosaflos Veneris, &c., vi. 489 ; vii. 170 Esto bonus saltern, si non potes, iv. 327 Et in Arcadia ego, x. 80 Eternite", deviens mon asile, xi. 429 Eve stood at the Garden gate, viii. 463 Faith, Hope, and Love were questioned, x. 107,

211 Farewell, the beautiful, meek, proud disdain, i.

208

Firm and erect the Caledonian stood, vi. 300 First love is a rank exotic, x. 68 Fit scelus indulgens per nubila saecula virtus, vi.

489

Fons et origo, iv. 327 Food for worms, good Percy, v. 210