548 



INDEX. 



Phipps family, 305. 

 Phosphoric light, 147. 331. 

 Photo on fading positives, 151. 



Photography : — 



albumenized process, 331. 

 anthropology and photography, 212. 

 bichloride of mercury, S13. 

 bitumen of Judaea, 393. 

 Brewster (Sir D), his affidavit on the 



calotype process, 3i. 

 bromide of silver, 410. 429. 472. 

 Buckle's brush, 192. 272. 313. 352. 373. 

 calotype process, 14. 34. 293. 

 camera, a new form suggested, 171. 

 cavils of photographers, 372. 410. 

 collodion, opacity of, 292. 

 collodion, restoration of old, 272. 

 collodion plates. 111. 172. 372. 411. 452. 



492. 

 Cundall's Photographic Primer, 251. 

 German, 331. 491. 

 glucose, 293. 

 grape sugar, 313. 

 heliographic engraving, 313. 

 Herscliel (Sir J.), his afiidavit on the 



calotype process, 35, 

 hints, 51. 



iodizing paper, 192. 



Lespiault's turpentino-w.«- paper pro- 

 cess 92. 

 Lyte'sproaess, 51. 73. HI. 133. 151.511. 

 manuals of i)hotography, 212. 

 mounting with Indian-rubber glue, 



251. 

 observation instrument, 352. 

 paper for photography, 15. 

 Paris exhibition, 271. 

 patents for discoveries, 293. 

 pins, substitute for, 15. 

 Plant's camera, 73. 

 positives, fading of, 151. 

 preparations, 293. 331. 

 Reade (J. B.), his letter to H. F. Tal. 



hot, 34. 

 Sedgfield's Photographic Delineations, 



51t).l 

 skies, intense, 472. 

 solution, its strength, 472. 

 jspots on collodion negatives, 512. 

 sugar of milk, 313. 

 Talbot (Mr. Fox.), his process, 15. 34. 



230. 429. 528. 

 Talbot ver. Laroclie, their trial, 528. 

 tests lor intensity of light, 51. 

 travelling photographers, 293. 

 unanimity among photographers, 372. 



410. 

 washing of paper positives, 251. 

 waxing positives, 112. 

 wax-paper process, 73. 172. 491. 

 wood engraving, 132. 



Phrenology partly anticipated, 6. 



<P. (T.) on descendants of Sir Matthew 

 Hale, 473. 



Pictaveus — Tankersley, 162. 355. 



Pilgrimages, modern, 25. 



Pillars resting on animals, 7. 



I'ines brought to England, 342. 



Pinkerton ( VV.) on black rat, 335. 



christening ships, 272. 



Irish newspapers, 473. 



Pismire, its derivation, 398. 



Pistols cocked before royalty, 404. 



" Pizarro," by R. Westall, K. A., 289. 



P. (J.) on anastatic printing, 423. 



" Charity begins at home," 403. 



Chaucer's parish prie.st, 387. 



evil eye in Scripture, &c , 415. 



drinking from seven glasses, 388. 



two quotations, 464. 



P. (J.) jun. on " cash," 255. 



P. (J. B. ) on the clsaracters of Don Quix- 

 ote, 343. 



Play-bill, supposed early one, 99. 



Playing cards, 4fi3. 



Plantagenets, their demoniacal descent, 37. 



Plumptre (Rev. James), his papers, 104. 



Plurality of worlds, 110. . 



P. (M.) on impossibilities of history, 415. 

 two brothers of the same christian 



name, 4.32. 

 P. (M. E.) on Murray's edition of Pope, 



258. 

 P. (N. E.) on pcny-post, .523. 

 P. (O.) on Pope's Odyssey, 112. 

 Pocklington (Dr. John), liis arms, 37. 

 Pocock (Richard) the orientalist, 2S7. 

 Pole (Edw.) on old Cornish song, 371. 

 " Political Register," its origin, &c., 423. 



492. 

 Polperro provincialisms, 178. 300. 318. 354. 



358.376.414.418.440. 479. 

 Polygamy among the Turks, 29. 154. 

 Ponds for insects, 66. 

 Pope sitting on the altar, 161. 273. 349, 534. 



POPIAN.\ : — 



Dunciad, 65. 109. 129. 148. 166. 194. 



197. 217—219. 238, 239. 257. 277. 298. 



358. 418. 

 Dunciad, collated editions, 477. 497. 



517. 

 Dunciad, entries at Stationers' Hall, 



519. 

 Essav on Man, 258. 479. 

 Ethic Epistles, 142. 218. 

 Imitation of Horace's Epistle to Au- 

 gustus, 418. 

 inscription on a punch-bowl, 258. 

 Longieat copies, 148.219. 

 Murray's projected edition of Pope's 



Works, 258. 

 Odyssey, 41. 112. 



Orme's notes to Pope's Works, 417. 

 Pope and the pirates, 197. 

 Pope and his printers, 217. 

 Pope's mother, 299. 358. 479. 

 Poi)e's nurse, 239. 

 Pope's quarrels, 277. 29S. 

 Pope's skull, 418. 45S. 478. 

 Satirical prints of Pope, 4 )8. 479. 

 Smyth (James Moore), 102. 2;38. 459. 

 Sober advice from Horace, 418. 

 Warburtons edition of Pope, 41. 90. 



108. 218, 219. 

 Welstead (Leonard) of the Dunciad, 



101. 



Porter, a drink, earliest notice of, 123. 



Postage, cheap, 442. 



Post-office stamps, errors in, 284. 



Potatoes first brought to England, 342. 



Potter (Thomas R.) on an ancient bell, 123. 



ballad, " The Brownie Girl," 127. 



Rev. Peter Eraser, 14(1 



Povey (Charles) noticed, 7. 155. 336. 



Powell (Charles F.) on brasses of notaries, 

 474. 



Powell (Thomas), his Repertory of Re- 

 cords, 366. 



Pownall (Governor), author of Junius, 

 324. 



P. (P.) on decalogue in churches, 3S7. 



— — factitious pedigrees, 255. 



heraldic quarterings, 54. 



Preston customs, 55. 



P. (P. T.) on Pope and his printers, 217. 

 25S. 358. 



P. (R.) on Morgan Odoherty, ISa 



orchard, its derivation, 50. 



Pre-Raff'aeli<m, 6. 93. 



Prayer. IJook Preface, 406. 



Prayer-Books, pictorial editions, 212. 



Pr.iyer, occasional forms of, 247. 341. 439. 



Precedence, rules of, 2U7. 352. 



Predictions, curious, 104. 459. 



Preen, or Prene, in Shropshire, 347. 



Prelates translated from York to Canter- 

 bury, 147. 



Prester John, 186. 



Preston, peculiar cu.stoms at, 55. 



Prestonieiisis on reversible names, 33. 



Pretsch (I'aul) on German i)hotography, 

 491. 



Pretty (E.) on Roman inscription, 431. 



Price (R.) on parallel passages, 325. 



pedagogic ingenuity, 401. 



Priest, epitaph on one, 100. 355. 



Prim (Gen.) noticed, 287. 412. 513. 



Printers' marks, 445. 



Prior's epitaph on himself, 216. 



Pritchard's ship, 345. 



Prophet, a political one, 483. 



Prostitution a religious ordinance, 245. 



Proverbs anh Phrases : — 



Better suffer than revenge, 305. 



Charity begins at home, 403. 



Cork — " It is nothing but cork," 



1.8. 

 Crawley Got! help us, &c., 223. 

 Cultiver mon jardin, 166. 294. 

 Cutting oft" with a shilling, 75. 

 De bene esse, 403. .'J33. 

 Ex quovis ligno non fit Mercurius, 



527. 

 Feather in his cap, 315. 

 Gib or jib — "The cut of his jib," 



482. 

 Gun — " As sure as a gun," 264. 

 He has hung up his hat, 203. 

 Jump for joy, 112. 

 Non ex quolibet ligno Mercurius, 447. 



527. 

 Nose of wax, 235. 

 Now-a-days, 487. 

 Old bird not to be caught with cliafT, 



343. 

 . Otiuin cum dignitate, 166. 

 Over the left, 236. 

 Pig in a poke, 187. 

 Putting a spoke in his wheel, 54k 

 Riding bodkin, 524. 

 The public never blushes, 185. 

 Tickill, God help me, 223. 

 Tit for tat, 524. 



'I'o get upon one's high horse, 242. 

 To lie at the catch, I3;3. 

 Unregistered proverbs, 210. 355. 

 Warwickshire proverbs, 68. 

 Whistling for the wind, 306. 

 Widdccombe folks are picking their 



geese, 173. 



Proverbs illustrative of national character, 



384. 



works on English, 389. 



Provincialisms, 120. 178. 256. 300. 318. 358. 



400. 414. 418. 440. 479. 



at Polperro, 178. 300. 318. 354. 358. 



414. 418. 440.479. 

 Proxies for absent sponsors, l.M. 

 Psalm Ixviii. 4., misprinted, 104. 133. 

 Psalm xc. 5., its translation, 70. 

 Psalms, authors of the Old Version, 365. 

 P. (S. 11.) on cannon used at Crecy, 306. 



crooked sixpence, 505. 



—J- iish-inoney, 364. 



St. Maudil's well, 322. 



tallies, their modern use, 485. 



Publicuns in Jewisli history, 223. 



Pulci's alliteration, 304. 



Pulpit hour-glasses, 38. 



Pulpit pun, 285. 



Punch or Paunch, its origin, 84. 



Punctuation, 482. 



Puritan antipathy to custard, 174. 



Puritan similes, 382. 



Puteo (Carolus Antonius de),307. 



P. (W.) on Herring's Rules for the Plague, 



509. 

 P. (W. F ) on Bede's dying words, £29. 

 P. (W. H. G.) on Raphael's cartoons, 435. 



Q. on A per se, 474. 



Aristotle, 4.54. 



conjurer, its old meaning, 472. 



fadeless, .507. 



harlot, 494. 



lantern-jaws, 474. 



Lord Brougham and Home Tookc, 



74. 

 obtain, its conventional use, 472. 



