INDEX. 



647 



Pettigrew (T. J.) on satirical playing-cards, 



405. 

 Pews in churches, their construction, 262. 

 P. (G. H.) on collodion process, 185. 

 *. on cross and pile, 487. 6;51. 



portrait of Duke of Gloucester, 338. 



princes' whipping-boys, S68. 



— — wet season in 1348, 63. 



4>. (2) on stereoscopic queries, .'505. 



4'. (li.) on clergy employed in lay-offlces, 50. 



Phillips family, 619. 



Phillips (J.) on Hogarth's portraits, 478. 



Philobiblion on anagrams, 452. 



inscriptions in books, 337. 



. Irish characters on the stage, 356.596. 



Waterloo, an ancien t battle-ground, 82. 



Philophotog. on black tints, 116. 

 Photo on collodion portraits, 388. 

 Phonography, Hart's work on, 26. 

 Photocraphv, albumen process, 116. 217. 



amber varnish, 562. 



animal charcoal in photography, 24.5. 



— antiquarian photographic club, 273. 

 462. 



Archer (Mr.), his services to photo- 

 graphy, 218. 



. black tints of French photographers, 



116. 315. 



calotype negatives, 437. 



.—— camera for out-door operations, 49.116. 



163. 266. 462. 

 . . catalogues of books, 507. 



— — collodion pictures, 485. 533. 582. 



..^—collodion process, 92. 116. 162, 163. 

 185. 266, 267. 363. 388. 414. 484. 562. 



DelaMotteandCundall'sPhotographic 



Institution, 442. 



developing chamber, 315. 



developing fluid, 462. 



— Diamond (Dr.), his services to photo- 

 graphy acknowledged, 93. 



difficulties in photography, 245. 



glass baths, 437. 557. 



gun cotton, 314. 



gutta percha baths, 415. 



head-rests, 338. 



—^ hydrosulphite of soda, 74. 



India-rubber substituted for yellow 



glass, 71. 

 i iodized paper, 48. 92. 140, 141. 187. 



293. 

 -^— iodizing difficulty, 605. 

 . Le Gray and the collodion process, 47. 



389. 

 lens, test for, 485. 533. 555. 582. 



— Lyle's mode of printing, 557. 

 microscopic pictures, 5u7. 556. 



. Newton's process, 140. 163. 187. 219. 



245. 294. 338. 

 —— Pollock's directions for obtaining 



positives, 581. 

 portraits of criminals, 506. 



— positives, 533. 581. 



. processes upon paper, 20. 71. v. 



— pyrogallic acid, 70. 117. 266. 



sealing-wax for baths, 314. 



—— sensitive paper, 48. 



Sisson's new developing fluid, 534. 



— soiling of the fingers, 162. 

 —— Society, 120. 



Society of Arts, their exhibition, 22. 



^— solutions, 48. 265. 363. 



stereoscopic pictures, 48. 70. 505. 557. 



— sulphuric acid, 265. 



talc for collodion pictures, 338. 



— — Taylor's iodizing process, 187. 217, 

 218. 244. 364. 



tent, 462. 485. 534. 



wax-paper process, 71. 93. 218. 



— Wilkinson's mode of levelling ca- 

 meras, 604. 



Picnic, its etymology, 23. 240. 387. 583. 

 Pictones (John), tutor to Queen Elizabeth, 



133. 

 Pictor on Herbe's Costumes Frangais, 182. 

 Picts' houses and argils, 430. 

 Pierrepont (John) noticed, 65. 606. 

 Pilgrimages to the Holy Land, 341. 415. 

 Pirn (.Jonathan) on marriage ring, 332. 



Pinkerton ( W.) on French sizain, 174. 



jiainter — Derrick, 507. 



Kobert Drury, 485. 



serpent's tongue, 316. 



throwing old shoes for luck, 288. 



unlucky days, 232. 



Pinto (Ferdinand Mendez), a liar of the 



first magnitude, 551. 

 Pitt of Pimperiie, his works, 135. 

 P. (.1.) on grafts and the parent tree, 261. 



lion at Northumberland House, 548. 



phrase " Coming home to men's 



business," 235. 



quotation from Shakspeare, 209. 



suicide at Marseilles, 316. 



P. (J.) jun. on emaciated figures, 439. 



font inscriptions, 625. 



P. (J. R.) on historical proverb, 1S& 

 Planets, origin of their names, 132. 

 Plants, discovery of, 84. 211. 



, names of wild, 233. 441 . , 



Plaster, Chapel, 37. 

 Play-bills, when introduced, 234. 

 Plough, the town, 129 339. 

 Plum.pudding at Paignton fair, 66.] 



receipt for making, 319. 



P. (M. T.) on Holies family, 132. 



P. (O.) on inscriptions in books, 337. 



Poem, an early satirical, 568. 



Poems, inedited, 424. 



Poisons used for bouquets, &c., 262. 



Polka, its antiquity, 15-2. 



Pollock (H ) on positive photographs, 581. 



Pope (Alex.) and the Marquis Maff'ei, 64. 



his corrections from the Dunces, 541. 



and Buchanan, 570. 



^— inedited poem by, 57. 113. 



Pophara (Lord Chief Justice) noticed, 259. 



305. 

 Pork-pisee, its meaning, 96. 

 Port (Justice) noticed, 572. 

 Portrait, a clerical one, 407. 

 Portrait painters at Bath and Derby, 180. 



294. 319. 393. 

 Portraits at Brickwall House, 406. 



, national, a catalogue suggested, 258. 



Postage stamps, perspective view of twelve, 



35. 

 Posts of conveyance, notices of, 3. 

 Potguns, 190. 319. 

 Powell (Sir John), 262. 359. 

 P. (P.) on picture of our Lord's trial, 235. 



subterranean bells, 200. 



P. (R.) on " lying by the walls," 332. 



Welsh legend of the retlbreast, 328. 



Pratt (Dean) noticed, 408. 



Prayer-book, editions prior to 1662, 18. 91. 



321. 

 Prester John, 502. 

 Prestoniensis on Chapel Sunday, 527. 



Segantiorum Portus, 180. 



Price (K.) on drawing an inference, 303. 

 Prigging tooth, or pugging tooth, 257. 

 Primrosen in East Anglia, 2Ul. 

 Princes' whipping-boys, 268. 

 Printers' grammars, 597. 

 Prisoners, form of prayer for, 410. 488. 

 P. (R. L.) on order of Si. John of Jeru- 

 salem, 407. 

 Proclamation of Henry VIII. against 



religious books, 421. 



, their value as historical evidences, 3. 



Proctor (Wm.) on brasses since 1688, 272. 



collar of SS., 297. 



Prospero, the island of, 524. 



Proverbs : — As poor as Job's turkey, 180. 



.— Catching a Tartar, 73. 



God tempers the wind, 193. 



Nine tailors make a man, 165. 557. 



Qui facit per alium, facit per se, 382. 



488. 629. 



To lie at the catch, 132. 



To talk like a Dutch uncle, 65. 



— — Very like a whale, 86. 



Weather, 200. 



— — When our Lord falls in our Lady's lap, 

 157. 



Winter thunder and summer flood, 



81. 



Proverb : — You change Norman for a 



worse horse, 156. 

 Psalmanazar, his history, 206. 305. 435. 479. 



551. 

 P. (S. R.) on raven superstition, 496. 



Valentines in America, 281. 



Pt. (A.) on Roman Catholic registers, 500. 

 Pumphrey (Wm.)on stereoscopic pictures, 



48. 

 Purlieu, its etymology, 477. G^. 

 Pursglove, suffragan bishop of Hull, 65, 



ia5. 



p. (W.) on the " Boy of Heaven," 429. 



Johnsoniana, 328. 



key to Dibdin's Bibliomania, 151. 



Spenser's birth-place, 303. 



talc for collodion pictures, 3S8. 



P. ( W. H.) on heraldic queries, 203. 

 P. ( W. M.) on passage in Thomson, 67. 

 Pylades and Coriuna, 305. 551. 



Q- 



Q. (F. S.) on Shakspeare's Twelfth Night, 



167. 

 Q . (Q.) on Diary of Thomas Earl, 206. 



etymology of jockey, 456. 



Qusrens on arms in painted glass, 132L 

 Qusero on Govett family, 85. 

 Querist on family of Abrahall, 357. 

 Quoits or quaits, 232. 

 QuoTA'i'ioNs : remarks on, 165. 



A Diasii Salve, 571. 630. 



Amentium baud Amantium, 595. 



.— A world without a sun, 40. 



As flies to wanton boys, 209. 



Bis dat, qui cito dat, 594. 



—— By prudence guided, 85. 



Dimidium scientia;, prudens quaistio, 



180. 270. 

 — — Elementa sex me proferent, 572. 630. 

 For God will be vour king to-day, 67. 



118. 

 God and the world we worship, 134. 



S97. 369. 

 ^— Hand cum Jesu itis, 295. 

 Her face was like the milky way, 305. 



390. 

 I hear a lion in the lobby roar, 205. 



318. 



Inter cuncta micans, 510. 



I saw a man, 571. 



It requirelh great cunning, &c., 40. 



117. 345. 



JudiEUS odor, 207. 295. 



^.— Life is like a game of tables, 40. 120. 

 Mala malse malo mala pertulit omnia 



in orbem, 180. 

 ^— Ma Ninette a quatorze ans, 84. 



Mater ait natfe, &c., 155. 247. 



Motto of Hyperion, 571. 



My mind to me a kingdom is, 511. 



Navita Erythrjeum pavidus, &c., 382. 



513. 



Ne'er to these chambers, 14. 72. 



Perhaps it was right to dissemble your 



love, 192. 



Plurima, pauca, nihil, 96. 167. 



Populus vult decipi, 572. 621. 



Quem Deus vult perdere, 618. 



Roma amor fe retro perlecto nomine, 



180. 



Seductor Sueeo, 595. 



See where the startled wild fowl, 67. 



Sic transit gloria mundi, 164. 



Solid men of Boston, 134. 222. 



Then comes the reckoning, 189. 



Three poets in three distant ages born, 



209. 

 — ^ Whene'er I ask'd for blessings, 66. 



— Words given to man to conceal his 

 thoughts, 164. 248. 



World without end, 26. 117. 



O. (W.) on Jock of Arden, 430. 



