Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - Volume 7.djvu/551

 Notes and Queries, July 27, 1901.

INDEX.

543

Prideaux (W. F.) on Earners family, 70

" Carking care," its meaning, 426

Edward VII.'s title in Scotland, 317

Fantastic fiction, 290

Johnson (Dr.), 295

Jonson (Ben), unpublished verses by, 46

Lamb (Charles) and 'The Champion,' 213

Nature myths, 35

Queens members of the Order of the Garter, 357

St. Clement Danes, 64, 274

Stow's (John) portrait, 1603, 513

Tyburn, manor of, 381 Prideaux (W. R. B.) on inoculation, 212

Ralegh's signature, 7

Seneca and Galen : translations wanted, 258 Printer's proof of poems, 187 Prisoners of war in English literature, 469 Pronunciation of words : dude, 15 ; dodo, 16 ; in- undate, 71 ; Greek and Latin, 146, 351, 449 Prophylactic, blood as a, 509 Prospect, use of the word in Authorized Version, 486

Proverbs and Phrases :

A rat without a tail, 486

Ah '11 travis ther, 445

Albert the Good, 88

Ance mariole, 47, 95

As right as a trivet, 227, 335

Between the devil and the deep sea, 449

Oarking care, 426

Clubbing the battalion, 110, 171, 314

Gone to Jericho, 55, 472

Grand tour, 509

Half rat and half weasel, 269

Hutching about, 165, 271

In the John Trott way, 48

In the swim, 29, 137, 237

J'ai vdcu, 105, 198

Le roy le veult, 264

Let them all come, 35, 157

Life is not all beer and skittles, 88

Lungs of London, 89

Mad as a hatter, 251, 396

Mere man, 506

Owl in ivy bush, 16, 116

Peace with honour, 24ft

Put a spoke in the wheel, 128, 258

Qui vive ? 245, 336, 438

Quot lingua-! calles, tot homines vales, 297

So long, 129, 233, 297

Straight off, 360

Time was made for slaves, 109

To hold up oil, 493

To join issue, 405

To sit bodkin, 228, 376

To trunk up, 165

Under weigh, 89 Public mourning, 150, 174, 295

Puncknowle, Dorset, bell inscription at, date 1629, 365 Purbeck (Lady) and her son, 389, 456 Puteanus on the D'Auvergne family, 332 Pym (Alexander), Sheriff of Somerset, 1650-1, 181 Pyne (C. A.) on Simon Fraser, 232 Q. (A. N.) on brawling, 227

Edward VII. 's title in Scotland, 225

Lady barrister, the first, 205

Q. (A. N.) on ' Lass of Richmond Hill,' 169

Stock Exchange centenary, 406

Sydenham Wells Park, 445 Quarrell (W. H.) on apparition, 267

Barry (Dr.), 448

Legend of Mugginton, Derbyshire, 265

Monolith with cup-markings in Hyde Park, 115

Motto for laundry porch, 176 Quarto : folio, use of the words, 185 Queen's College, Oxford, the patrons of, 246 Queens members of the Order of the Garter, 166, 357 " Questing beast," mentioned in Malory, 149, 234 Quotation, an adulterate, 5

Quotations :

A certain tender bloom his face o'erspread, 388 A man cannot enter twice into the same river, 506 A sense of joy to the bare trees and mountains

bare, 388

A ship came sailing o'er the sea, 330 All roads lead to Rome, 427, 511 And Judgment at the helm was set, 90, 398 And snatching, as they [c. the years] go, 110, 198 And the night shall be filTd with music, 440 And visions, as poetic eyes avow, 388 Battle over, sleep in clover, 8 Beats the strong heart, 8 Beauty out of favour and on crutches, 388 Better to have loved and lost, 125, 236 Blood he had view'd, 8, 292 Calm contemplation and poetic ease. 388 Cette longue et cruelle maladie qu'on appelle la

vie, 497

Cold water is the best of drinks, 90, 198 Credat Judaeus Apella, 240

De male quaesitis vix gaudet tertius haeree, 74, 1 70 Est rosa flos, 170 For he had heard of battles, 8 From the still glassy lake that sleeps, 330 God only knows, and none but He, 510 Great is the crime in man or woman, 120 He died and bequeathed to his son a good name, 8 How happy 's the soldier, 8, 332 I am Sir Oracle, 440 I do love these ancient ruins, 460 I hate all kings and the thrones they sit on, 27 I saw a falling leaf soon strew, 148 I saw a Judas once, 369, 458 I 've lived to see how pride may part, 369 Kind and affable to me had been his condescension,

388

Le divorce est le sacrement de 1'adultere, 497 Les amis, ces parents que Ton se fait soi-mdme, 497 Life's work well done, 369, 406 Like strength reposing on his own right arm, 388,

458 Man is bound to expend every particle of strength,

369

Maxima in minimis natura, 497 Mira cano : sol occubuit : nox nulla secuta est, 74 Mourir n'est rien, c'est notre derniere heure, 497 Nemo potest impetrare a papa bullam nunquam

moriendi, 497

Obscurity her curtain round them drew, 388 Oh memory ! shield me from the world's poor

strife, 388