^28 



INDEX. 



Nottingham riots, 49. 



Nova Scotia bishops, 188. 



Novacula on Russian wid English regi- 

 ment, .02. 



Noviomagus, city of, 303. 



Nugee (George) on female penitentiaries, 

 48. 



Nugent (John), his coffln-plate, 163. 



Nuns acting as priests, 47. 154. 294. 346. iSi. 



Nursery hymn : " Gentle Jesus," &c., 206. 

 313. 474. 511. 



Nutcelle monastery, 152. 271. 



N. (W. N.) on traditions of the deluge, 284. 



O. 



O. on a descendant of Meg Merrilees, 299. 



O. 1. (J.) on Adagia Scotica, 486. 



Oalis, their age, 16. 



Oatli, the corporal, 232. 



Odessa, why spare it? 45. 



O. (E. W.) on ancient libraries, 512. 



— ^ Cocoa Tree coffee-house, 504. 



Mathematical Bibliography, 516. 



ritual of Holy Confirmation, 512. 



- — Sir 'J'homas Chaloner, 513. 



Oftbr (Geo.) on variations in Prayer Book, 



463. 

 O, (I. P.) on artificial ice, 39. 



quarter of wheat, 455. 



O. (J.) on Adamsoniana, 195. 

 ~ Apostate Protestant, 368. 



blind lascar, 241. 



Code de la Nature, &c., 366. 



Comenii Orbis Pictura, 311. 



" Egypt, a Descriptive Poem," 406. 



England's Glory, 385. 



first book printed in New England, 



230. 



Happy future State of England, 385. 



poetical Thomas k Kempis, 2f)4. 



Scottish family feud, 225. 



Visions of Sir Heister Riley, 231. 



Youth's Tragedy, 476. 



" Old Dominion," or Virginia, 246. 

 Oldham (Bishop Hugh), his descendants, 



64. 135. 

 Oldham (Rev. Geo.), noticed, 409. 

 OUones, 266. 



Omicron on family of Symondson, 276. 

 Omnibus, when first used, 281. 

 Orange, its cultivation by the Romans, 41. 



110. 154. 

 Oratorians, 503. 



" Oriana," origin of the heroine, 445. 516. 

 Oriel, its derivation, 112. 414, 

 Orkney islands, 182. 

 Orme (Capt.) of Hertford, 242. 

 Ormonde Correggio, 64. 

 Ormonde (James, 2nd Duke), his MSS., 



227. 

 Orts, a provincialism, 501. 

 Osliern's Life of Odo, 45. 154. 236. 

 Ossian's Poems, 92. 213. 

 Ottinge (J. D.) on the sting of the bee, 489. 

 Oxford B. C. L. on ancient beers, 154. 



— galore, its derivation, 103. 



— lay-preachers, 153. 

 Oxford educational system, 241. 



Oxford jeux d'esprit, 37. 127. 173. 233. 314. 



349. 416. 

 Oxford new Museum, 300. 

 Oxonian on Arminian and Calvinistic 



writers, 245. 

 Oxoniensis on cathedral registers, 496. 



Wm. Pierpoint's MSS., •i25. 



Oysters with an r in the month, 302. 373. 



414. 



P. on Sanlegue, 433. 



Sardinian royal family, 453. 



P. Portland Maine, on nautical queries, 



243. , 

 Paget arms, 585. 494. 



Paget (Arthur) on clay tobacco-pipes, 37. 



Dutch song, 494. 



— — fire-arms, 456. 



Niagara, 135. 



Paget arms, 494. 



Paisley Abbey, 107. 215. 

 Palaeologi family, 31. 

 Palatines in Ireland, 87. 172. 251. 

 Paley (Dr.) and Bishop Porteus, 484. 

 Pamplin (W.) on cummin seed, 94. 



" As big as a parson's barn," 113. 



sea-serpent in 1632, 204. 



Pancras (St.), churches dedicated to him, 



37. 94. 

 Pap» of Iceland and Orkney, 181. 285. 

 P. (A. R.) on handbook for the war, 424. 

 Parallel passages, 406. 488. 

 Pardon bell, 33. 

 Paris Garden manor, 52. 

 Parish registers, 17. 

 Park (Thomas), letter to Edmond Malone, 



2i7. 

 Parker Society, General Index to the 



series, 336. 

 Parliamentary papers, index to, 417. 

 Parochial registers, 241. 

 Parr (Thomas), noticed, 266. 

 Parrot, a female, hostility to its own sex, 



408. 

 Parsons (D.) on book-plates, 351. 

 Party, its modern use, 154. 

 Pascal, saying of, 173. 

 Passionalc : a portion of the Gospels, 427. 

 Patonce on Dean Bill, 49. 129. 

 — coat armour, 13. 



times prohibiting marriage, 374. 



Patrick (Bp. .Symon), his Prayers and Ser- 

 mon, 125. 



incident in his Mensa Mystica, 385. 



Patrick's (St.) purgatory, 233. 

 Paul (Jean), Comte de Cerdan, 445. 

 Paul (St.), his quotations of heathen 



writers, 286. 

 P. (C. F.) on Charles I.'s relics, 174. 



epitaphs, 190. 



Grey or Gray, 323. 



inscriptions on bells, 210. 



P. (D.) on works of the schoolmen, 36. 

 P. (E.) on the term dancettee, 391. 

 Peach, its early cultivation, 41. 

 Peacham (Henry), his works, 217. 296. 408. 

 Peacock (Edward) on bell inscriptions, 211. 



Earl of Derwentwater's library, 204. 



earthen vessels in buildings, 315. 



French Protestant refugees, 287. 



More (Sir Thomas), his works, 324. 



reading in darkness, 125. 



, way-side crosses, 506. 

 Pearmonger, its meaning, 244. 274. 392. 

 Pears ( E. W.) on death-bed superstition, 91. 

 Peart, its ineaning, 114. 232. 244. 274. 

 Peerage cases, 486. 



Pelicanus Araericanus on Hogarth's play- 

 ticket, 303. 



Palmyra, its author, 314. 



philological notes, 338. 



— ^ quotation, 503. 



Rochford (Lord), his payment, 343. 



screw plot, 2()7. 



Thames water, 372. 



" Tin Trumpet," 384. 



Penn (Wm.), ineciited letter of, 359. 



Perche and Mortain (Earls of), 265. 



" Perverse Widow," 153. 



Pett (Sir Peter), his Happy Future State of 



England, 385. 

 <1>. on Archdeacon Fiirney, 205. 



naval victories, 462. 



0ikav8e; on the bluB rose, 474. 

 Philip of Macedon, anecdote of, 410. 

 Philip (St.) of Neri, 503. 

 Phillips's New World of Words, 167. 208. 

 Philological notes, 338. 

 Philologus on poetical tavern signs, 74. 

 " Philomorus : Latin Poems of Sir T. 

 More," 428. 



Photography : 



acetate and nitrate of lead, 371. 



Photoguaphy : 



amber varnish, 390. 



ambrotype likenesses, 270. 



Amsterdam photographs, 270. 



Barr's dark slide for the paper process, 

 311. 



bath for nitrate of silver, 471. 



bromo-iodide of silver, 15. 51. 91. 130. 

 191.211. 230. 



camera for saccharised plates, 192. 290. 



ceroleine on glass, 289. 



collodion plates developed, fS. 



collodion for different teni])eratures, 

 412. 



coUodionizcd glass plates, 34. 90. 191. 



copying photographs, 171. 



Crookes's wax-paper process, 471. 



Diamond (Dr.), his formula, 212. 250. 



dry collodion, 390. 



fading of photographs, 110. 151. 171. 

 231.390. 413. 432. 451. 



Fortier's albumenized glass, 511. 



Hardwick's Manual of Photographic 

 Chemistry, 250. 



heliographic engraving, 371. 



Hillotype, 71. 



hypo., recovery of silver from waste, 

 471. 



hypo, removed from positives, 471. 



La Lumiere and photography in Eng- 

 land, 16. 



lens, ancient, 171. 



Lyte's collodion, 3.50. 491. 



Mansell's process, 71. 



Menitt's camera, 250. 331. 351. 



Photographic Exchange Society, 151. 



Photographic Society exhibition, 16. 

 51. 351. 



photography at sea, 270. 



positive impressions, solution to pre- 

 serve, 351. 



positive paper, 270. 350. 



positives, their alteration and revival, 

 451. 



positives, their fading, 110. lal. 171. 

 231. 390. 413. 432. 451. 



Price's photographs, 171. 



printing negative, 371. 



sensitive plates, their preservation, 110. 

 191. 290. 



soldiers' and sailors' likenesses, 131.^ 



steaming syruped collodion plates, 331. 



Sutton's calotype process, 37J. 



Talbot ver. Laroche, 16. 71. 



Thompson's Raphael drawings, 71. 151. 



wax-paper process, 471. 



Physicians and leeches, 3,;9. 



Pickering (Mr.), his device, 196. 



Pierpoint (.William), his MSS., 425. 495. 



" Piers Plowman's Visions," annotations 

 on, 280. 



Pindar's Pythia, passage in, 304. 



Pinkerton (W.) on a curious incident, 269. 



serpent's egg, &c., 345. 



Pior (St.), noticed, 366. 471. 



Piskies in Cornwall, 397. 4,57. 



Pius V. and the Book of Common Prayer, 

 401. 



P. (J.) on Pym of Woolavington, 502. 



Placard in Derby museum, 404. 



Plain Man on Latinizing proper names, 27. 



Pium-pudding, origin of the name, 3f)6. 



P. (M.) on custom at public feasts, 192. 



dedication of Heworth Church, 186. 



P— ra. (P.) on armorial queries, 87. 



Levinus Monk, 06. 



Poems, anonymous MS. volume, 502. 



" Poetical Epistle to Dr. W. K.," 444. 514. 



Poetry of flowers in foreign literature, 26. 



Pointer, on epigram of -Sir John Leech, 300 



Political Register, writers in it, 35. 



Pollard ( W.) on the seizure of Bellingham, 

 300. 



Polldavy, coarse cloth, 266. 333. 475. 



Pomegranate, its early cultivation, 41. 



Pontanus (Jov.), poem " Cur mittis vio- 

 las?" 47. 



Pontypool waiter, 416. 472. 



