Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - Volume 2.djvu/571

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 21, 1899.

INDEX.

563

Quatre mendiants=dish of four fruits, 07 Queen Square, Bloomsbury, bouses in, 248 " Queen's English," queer, 146, 269 Querist on picture marks, 68

Quotations :

A plant, a leaf, a blossom, but contains, 228, 358

A preacher without orders, 289, 397

Ah, why did I so late Thee know ? 398

Alas ! that I so lately knew Thee, 309, 398

And when with envy Time transported, 147

Backward, turn backward, 7, 72, 138

Boys flying kites haul in their white -winged

birds, 389

Carnage is God's daughter, 309, 398 Forty stripes save one, 389, 458 From such a sharp and waspish word, 289, 397 God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb, 13(5 Great God, to see the golden stream, 269 Has matter innate motion ? 78 He did not know, poor brute, 309 His slumber, when he slumbers, 228 Hush ! hush ! I am listening for the voices, 78, 138 In green old garden hidden away, 228 Ingratitude, thou, child of hell, 69 Inveni portuni, 41, 229

La mort a des rigueurs a nulle autre pareilles, 453 La mort est le baiser de Dieu, 69, 159 Le bon temps ou nous etions si malheureux ! 428 Let me believe and love, 69 Men's first thoughts on moral matters, 134, 198 My songs have had their day, 389

matutini roses aura que salubres ! 27, 218

01 icvfioi AC ad iv TTITTTOVOI, 389, 458 One with God is a majority, 389 Prisca juvent alios, 27. 118

Res nolunt diu male administrari, 389

Restore the Heptarchy ! 135

Said Day to Might, "I bring God's light," 69,

258, 458

She should never have looked at me, 258 She who rocks the cradle rules the world, 358, 458 Solamen miseris socios habuisse doloris, 66, 250 Studium sine calamo est somnium, 347 Sumer is y-cumen in, 7, 109, 176, 234, 512 That sayd, her round about she from her turnd, 78 The briidal is over, the guests are all gone, 27 The curse of a granted prayer, 289, 397 The good of other times let other people state, 27,

118 The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world,

358, 458

The love-light in her eyes, 69, 138 The lovely young Lavinia once had friends, 78 The Present is the life of man, 228 Then old age and experience, hand in hand, 289 Through obedience learn to command, 317 'Twas meant for merit, though bestowed on me, 389 United States, your banner wears, 69 TJno avulso non deficit alter, 67 When in retreat Fox lays his thunder by, 78 Whose curtain never outward swings ! 67, 118 Wilt thou ? I know thou wilt, 27 Wo sind die schonen Tage hin, 69 Wouldst have a friend ? 148 You should indeed have longer tarried, 389

R. (D.) on titles of pictures, 76

R. (D. M.) on weighing-in mayor, 509

Monastic orders, 474

Phisgie=pick, 488

Squab, its meaning, 167 R. (J. B.) on Mill Bay, Plymouth, 497 R. (R.) on remembrance of past joy, 262

"Mess of potage," 17

Milton (John) and the North. 56

Shakspeare First Folio, 211 R. (T.) on " Sair saunt for the Crune " 407 R. (V. H.) on " Coll. Reg. Oxon.," 187 Rackstrow's Museum, its history, 208 Radcliffe (J.) on "Buried for truth," 77

Chancellor of England, 137

Cooke family, 254

' Country Gentleman's VadeMecum,' 495>

Erkenwald, Bishop of London, 318

Flodden, King's stone at, 131

Gordon family, 174

Heraldic query, 153

Herbert (Sir Thomas), 438

London Lord Mayor, first, 437

Master family, 1 78

Odin, his descendants, 177

' Oxford Argo,' 475

Peter the German, 437

Proverbs, dictionary of English, 117

Rudston (Sir John), 515

Rush (Sir W. B.), 157

Silver plate, 375

Soleby, co. Leicester, 158 Radford (VV. L.) on "Settle," 316

Trafalgar Chapel, 328 Randall (J.) on Gilbert or Guilbert, 527 Kami an, its derivation, 507 " Random of a shot," the phrase, 309 Ranter, its change of meaning, 136 Rape=division of a county, 165 Raphael (S.), and Rubens, 28, 230 : bis works for

Leo X., 88

Rastell (John), his ' Pastyme of People,' 266 Ratcliffe (T.) on "Big an' bug," 144

Bob-baw = don't touch, 226

"Brazen-soft," 86

"Chalk on the door," 37

Christmas tup, 511

Crex, its meaning, 135

" Cutting his stick," 417

" Die stillborn," 50

"Down to the ground," 73

" Enjoy bad health," 248

Epitaphs, 536

Gillery, its meaning, 246

Hooligan = street ruffian, 316

Marbles, " alley-taw " and other, 815

Neck-handkerchief, 375

Pattens and clogs, 95, 334, 494

" Pig-a-back," 497

Purr = kick, 506

Rounds or rungs, 493

Rye House Plot, 34

Squab, its meaning, 352 Ravens worth, its etymology, 47, 96, 218 Rayment (H.) on Boulanger and French rolls, 186