Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/288

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GENERAL INDEX.

White (Robert) on De Barry family and Worksop Priory, x. 228. Dukery, vii. 369. Installation of a midwife, vii. 352. Nottinghamshire map, ii. 169. Obituary notices of contributors, iv. 412. Pricket candlesticks, x. 228

White (R. N.) on Samuel Richardson, viii. 163 White (Sir Thomas) and Sir Henry Cromwell, ix. 166,

274

White (Thomas), his biography, i. 27 White (T.) on cardinals, xii. 19. Episcopal College of St. Edward, x. 213. Epitaph, faded, i. 250. Fleming (Marjorie), her portrait, x. 251. Garrick's statue of Shakespeare, x. 357. Gladstone's statue, vii. 178. Klopstock's 'Stabat Mater,' xii. 56, 134. Landor query, vi. 38. Suff and stuff, xii. 96 White (W. S.) on Clayton family, ix. 68 White money in Elizabethan times, iii. 108, 210 White night or sleepless night, iv. 439, 508 White Horse at Westbury, estimate for cleaning, xii.

503 Whitebait dinner, ministerial, xii. 189, 272, 306, 337,

376, 415, 431

Whitebrook (J. C.) on Cud worth family, viii. 45 Whitebrook family and Pond Farm, Leicester, v. 88 Whitechapel and Aldgate, iv. 168, 269, 385, 44 1; v.

34, 134

Whitefield's ' Hymns,' first edition, x. 109 Whitehall, Holbein gateway in, v. 27, 320 Whitehead (Christopher), his ' Paradise,' ii. 188 White-headed boy, its meaning, x. 229, 376, 518 Whitehill (Lord), d. 1702, xi. 49, 156, 239 Whitehouse & James on Dante portrait, xi. 388. Reynolds portrait, xi. 396. Whitmore (Lady), x. 450

Whitesowle or whitsul, its meaning, ii. 68, 182, 417 Whiteway (Mrs. Martha), cousin german to Swift, ii.

147 Whiteway (Martin), his will, dated 2 Jan., 1644, ix.

428

Whitgift (Archbishop), his Hospital at Croydon, vi. 127, 341, 383, 402, 423, 479, 513; vii. 178, 256, 358, 450; viii. 107, 230 Whitman (Sidney), mistakes in his 'Realm of the

Habsburgs,' xi. 168

Whitman (Walt), his "hexameters," vii. 246 Whitmore (Lady), her identity and portraits, x. 268,

318, 395, 450, 492 ; xi. 158, 311 Whitridge (H.), publisher circa 1739, ix. 388 Whitsul or whitesowle, its meaning, ii. 68, 132, 417 Whitsun farthings in churchwardens' book, x. 168 Whittier(J. G.), his 'William Francis Bartlett,' xi.

28, 90 Whittinghame, Mr. A. J. Balfour's residence at, xi.

306 Whittington and his cat=a barge, viii. 305, 485

" Greased eel," iv. 189. Grisky : Grissy, iv. 353. Handwarcelle, iv. 418. Hard, iv. 228. Hemlock tree, iv. 309. Henchman, iv. 455. Herald, in old deed, i. 8. Hesmel, its meaning, i. 87. Hokeday, its etymology, i. 287; ii, 92. ' Homish Apothe- cary,' iv. 68. Hooper (Bp.), his vestments, iii. 209. "Horse chestnut," ii. 46. Horse Guards, ii. 7. Horse marine, ii. 26. " Horse-sense," i. 487. Horse- man's bed, ii. 149. " Hounds" at King's College, Cambridge, ii. 177. House of Lords' Papers, iv. 166. Huckler, a dance, ii. 149. Huddle = winning cast, ii. 187. Humdrum, iv. 378. " Imperium in iin- perio," iv. 135. Initial for forename in serious verse, iv. 184. Italian ball game, iii. 213. Italian bankers and the Holy See, x. 128. Italian litera- ture, early, iii. 7. Jew's harp, iii. 34. Knife- board of an omnibus, vii. 487. Langtoft's 'Chronicle,' iv. 147. 'Lettres du Prince Edwarde, fit aisne du roy Edw. [I.],' viii. 441. Luton Trinity Guild, iv. 307. Maheu de Redman, iv. 352. Merchants of Luk or Lukes, ix. 56. Newman, book by, iv. 178. Newspaper, early, iv. 148. ' Nomen- clator Navalis,' viii. 134. Oath: " The Great Oath," iv. 438. Peat, iv. 448. Pinaseed, its meaning, iv. 205, 335. Quotation marks, iv. 86. St. Edward's shrine : ' Textus Sancti Edwardi,' ix. 486. Shake- speare's vocabulary, ix. 167. Sheep-farming, mon- astic, x. 47. Sheridan and Dundas, ii. 28. " Six- shilling beer," iv. 128. Somerville's 'Chace,' vii. 447. "Take to stey," iv. 107. Tapestries of Henry VII., viii. 365. Topographical collections for counties, iv. 402. Wardrobe Book, iv. 208. Windsor chairs, iv. 57 Wh8m=home, vii. 286, 374 Whoost = cough, i.247, 337, 436; ii. 336 Whuppity Scoorie, Lanark custom, its origin, xi. 265 Whycherly or Wycherly family, ii. 207 Whyte-Melville (G. J.), "White faunch deer," iii. 169, 372; quotation in 'Brookes of Bridlemere,' 368, 471 ; inscription on his grave, viii. 245 Wibern (Galfridus), his seal, i. 167 Wichenton (Henry of), Justiciar of the King's Court,

vi. 469

Wick=dairy, its derivation, xi. 348, 495; xii. 113 Wicked Bible, iv. 220

Wicken = Wykes, in Northamptonshire, viii. 40 Wickey-up, etymology of the word, xii. 186 Wickliffe (John), lineal descendant, v. 412 ; vi. 33 Wickliffe family, vi. 449 Widdrington (Capt. Edward), of Felton, his biography,

x. 187

Widecombe-in-the-Moor. See Withycombe. Widow on wife v. family, i. 185

Widow's man, meaning of the expression, v. 148, 254 Widow's peak, or point, various meanings, iv. 459

Whitwell (R. J.) on Agam colour, iii. 170. ' Alphita,' Widrington (Sir Edward), his tomb and wife's parents,

medico-botanical glossary, iv. 403. Bolton Abbey Compotus, x. 86. British flag, vi. 351. Colum- baria : dovecotes, iii. 113. 'Constitutio Societatis Navium Bajonensium,' 1213, xi. 129. Cottier, its meaning, iv. 67. ' Customs Rolls of the Pipe,' iv. 88. D.S.P.F.C., iv. 192. DeFeritate family, iii. 192. Drowned bodies recovered, iv. 343. Dyng-

v. 49 Wienholt (E. C.) on Brown family, ix. 228. Marks

on table linen, ix. 427 Wife v. family, i. 185, 274

Wife's sister, deceased, Manx law relating to, iv. 226 ' Wig, episcopal, its introduction, vii. 387 Wig = bun, vi. 454 ; vii. 15

ham and Ockham Priories, x. 309. Galloglass, its " Wig of bread," iii. 168, 252


 * ning, vii. 506. Girst, its meaning, iv. 91. Wigan (Alfred), his marriage, i. 268, 317