Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - Volume 4.djvu/551

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 30,1900. 573 INDEX. Proverbs and Phrases :— Quiller-Couch (A. T.), mistaken identity, 225 A pickled rope, 479 Quilliam (Lieut.), of the Victory, 416 ; his use of the An old friend and a good singer, 26 word tniddlin', 495 As black aa the Devil's nutting-bag, 478 Quitter (J.) on child's book, 499 As fu 's the Baltic, 288, 336, 406 Quotation marks, the ethics of, 86 As hard as the Devil's forehead, 478 As mean as tongs, 206 Quotations :— As sure as there is a hip on a goat, 187, 461 And helped his party for his country's weal, 499 Ass bearing books, 897, 483 And still beneath the cavern dread, 518 Common or garden, 89, 155 Anglorum Regi scrips) t scbola tota Salerni, 98 Congeniality of great minds, 229 Ah! pourquoi 1'amitiiS ge'mirait-elle encore ? 308 Curse of Scotland, 89 Cum talis sis, utinam noeter esses, 184 Gentlemen and ladies, French usage, 476, 528 Cunning, like a skilful miner, 517 Gleg: To be aff the gleg, 47, 251, 314 Dies creta notandus, 12 Glewed to the worlde, 166, 315 Earthly cavern, to thy keeping, 287 Godfrey : To Godfrey, 445 England will never fall, 288 God's first creature, which was light, 398, 462 Forgive, blest shade, 320 Great oath, 438 From lower to higher, from simple to complete, Greave or greave-by, 107 130, 218 Gropsing of the evening, 247 Good Musselmen ! abstain from pork, 69, 158 Gy : At an idle gy, 27 How big was Alexander, pa ? 208 Haft: By the haft, 237, 355 I 'in the sweetest of sounds, 530 Head and harigald money, 379, 446 I shall pass through the world but once, 490 Hill me up, 234 It is the fair acceptance, sir, 98 Imperium in imperii, 69, 135, 254 Latin quotations, 327 King of Bantam, 419, 488, 626 Le jeune homme a mauvaise grace, 538 Le mot de Cambronne, 265, 355, 541 Life's race well run, 167 Like a thresher, 106, 171, 234, 254 Life's work well done, 60 Many a seven, 263 Love ! sure the word is composed, &c., 207 Mend the fire, 439, 488 Manus justa nardus, 329 Mill-wheel cannot grind again, 410 Married ! married ! and not to me, 168, 255 Mutual Admiration Society, 417 Not aa ours the books of old, 130, 218 Parliamentary language, 442 Oh, good painter, tell me true, 230, 409 Passing the time of day, 72 Our apprehensions mar our days, 9 Pennyworth : A good pennyworth, 436, 522 Raphael paints wisdom, 130 Puts nowt up to mean nowt, 52, 161, 237 She went into the garden, 240 Right of onstand, 25 Stranger who wanderest through our smiling land, 188 Seal of the morning, 129, 175 Sent to Coventry, 264, 335 Strenua nos exercet inertia, 291 Sun drawing water, 205 Sounds which address the ear are lost and die, 49 Take to stey, 107 The day this letter, 69 Toad : Soft as a toad, 516 The hearts of men, which fondly here admire, 98 Truth is the daughter of Time, 289, 338, 442 The nymph who bids these waters flow, 28, 75 Ugly mug, 268, 402 Their time a moment, and a point their space, Unearned increment, 109, 153, 235, 258 499 Up, Guards, and at them ! 497, 543 When the world was young, 230, 258, 298 Public schools with branch establishments, 18 When the dim presence of the awful night, 48, 95, Purbeck marble used for building purposes, 379 251 Purism of speech, 349 When time shall turn those amber locks to gray, Pushkin (A. S.), centenary of his birth, 33 ; his im- 109, 157, 287 mortality predicted by himself, 33, 172 ; and the Where Rivers, Vaughan, and Grey lay shorter tender passion, 51 ; his alphabetic apophthegms by the head, 499 224, 468 Vou are old, Father William, 240, 305 Q., pseudonym of two writers, 225 R. (A. F.) on authorship of "The Red, White, and Q. (Mrs.), engraving, 28 Blue,' 426 Quaritch (6,), some remarks on book-prices, 496 Emmas at fairs, 381 Quarre Abbey, Isle of Wight, its name, 233 Thames tunnel, 419 Quarrell (W. H.) on Gate, inn sign, 196 R. (D. M.) on letter of James VI., 408 Horse-bread, 833 R. (M.) on idyl or idyll, 8 Human strength, 324 R. (W. F.) on Latin couplet, 28 Pens, nibs, and nebs, 171 Pinaseed, 336 Perfidious Albion. 234 11. (W. S.) on links with the past, 319 Vanishing London, 86, 165, 455 Rabel (Jean and Daniel), their sepia etchings, 880, Queues as worn in the army in 1798, 223 427