606 



INDEX. 



B.'.xter (Richard), inscription on his pulpit, 



61. 

 B. C. Y. characters, 149. 

 Beattie (Dr.) on the English liturgy, 466. 

 Bee, the wandering, 370. 

 Bees, legends respecting, 167. 



on bartering for, 446. 



Belgium ecclesiastical antiquities, 386. 



Bell inscriptions, 109. 592. 



Bell at Rouen, 233. 529. 



Bell literature, 240. 310. 



Bell, why tolled on leaving church, 125. 



311.567. 

 Belle Sauvage, its derivation, 44. 89. 

 Bellman at Newgate, 565. 

 •Berkhampstead records, 56. 

 •Bersethrigiimnue, its meaning, 373. 

 Bible, an illustrated one of 1527, 352. 504. 

 Bible, Breeches, an imperfect one, 273. 

 Bible Society of the Human Catholics, 41. 



111. 

 Bibles, errata in, 391. 



reprints of earlv, 487. 



Bickford (Win.), letter to Rev. Mr. Amory, 



7. 

 B'got, its derivation, 560. 

 Binding of old books, how polished, 401. 

 Bingham's Ai.tiquities, queries in, 197- 308. 

 *Biugham (Sir John) noticed, 450. 

 •Birds, marvellous combat of, 303. 

 Birm-bank, its derivation, 12. 

 Bishops' kennel of hounds, 247. 432. 



tombs, 146. 



*Black cap of the judges, 399. 

 Blackguard, its original meaning, 15. 153. 



503. 

 Blase (St.), his festival at Norwich, 353. 

 *Blechenden family, 422. 

 Blessington (Countess of), her letter to Sir 



Wm. Druminond, 268 

 B. L. M., Italian subscription, explained, 



43. 

 Bloater or herring, explained, 347. 

 151oet (Robert) noticed, 105. 181. 

 Blue Bell and Blue Anchor, sign, 86. 

 Blue Bells of Scotland, 209. 600. 



* Board of Trade in seventeenth century, 



562. 



* Bohemia (Queen of) and a foreign order, 



10. 

 Bohme (Jacob), 151. 

 Bolle (Sir John) of Thorpe Hall, 305. 

 Books burnt by the hangman, 78. 226. 425. 

 Books in parts not completed, 147. 258. 



Books, Notices of New : — 



Ackerman's Remains of Pagan Saxon- 



dom, 313. 

 Ada's Thoughts, or the Poetry of 



Youth, 21. 

 Addison's Works, by Bishop Hurd, *J0. 



313. 458. 

 Arundel Society publications, 289. 

 Autograph Miscellany, 90. 

 Banrield's Statistical Companion, 458. 

 Beauties of Byron, 21. 

 Bell's edition of the British Poets, 138. 



554. 

 Brav's Peep at the Pixies, 21. 

 Bristol, Curiosities of, 210. 

 Brook's Russians of the South, 90. 

 Conde's Arabs in Spain, 410. 

 Conversations on Geography, 289. 

 Croker's Correspondence with Lord 



John Russell. 210. 

 Custine (M. de) upon Russia, 289. 

 D'Arblay's Diary and Letters, 289. 



410. 433. 505, 

 Darling's Cyclopaedia Bibliographica, 



66. 234 313. 339. 458. 554. 

 Dod's Peerage for 1854, 46. 

 Dryden's Works, by R. Bell, 66. 458. . 

 Durriew's Present State of Morocco, 



433. 

 Essays from The Times, 410. 

 Eyton's Antiquities of Shropshire, 21. 

 Foster's Elements of Jurisprudence, 



210. 

 Gibbon's Rome (Bonn's), 163. 387. 

 Gibbon's Rome (Murray's), 234. 338. 



Books, Notices of New : — 



Giffard's Deeds of Naval Daring, 433. 

 Gothe's Novels and Tales, 66. 



Goldsmith's Works, by Peter Cunning- 

 ham, 45. 138. 4 >8. 554. 



Hailey (Lady Brilliana), her letters, 

 210. 



Hunt's Manual of Photography, 458. 



Journal of Classical and Sacred Philo- 

 logy, 289. 



Journal of Sacred Literature, 66. 339. 



Keightley's Mythology of Ancient 

 Greece, 288. 



Lanman's Adventures in North Ame. 

 rica, '23 1 . 



Lardner's Museum of Science and Art, 

 162. 



Lloyd on the Shield of Achilles, 338. 



Locke's Works, 505. 



Lower's Contributions to Literature, 

 162. 



Lushington's Points of War, 505. 



Macaulay's Critical and Historical 

 Essays, 234. 339. 433. 554. 



Macaulay's Speeches on Parliamentary 

 Reform, 21. 



MacCabe's Catholic History of Eng- 

 land, 504. 



Mantell's Geological Excursions, 162. 



Marley's Life of Girolamo Cardano, 

 313. 



Munch's Scandinavian History, 410. 



Museum of Science and Art, 66. 



Netherclift's Autograph Miscellany, 

 289. 



Pepys's Diary and Correspondence, 

 2J4. 



Petit's Architectural Studies in France, 

 313. •■ 



Pryce's Memorials ofthe Canynges, 138. 



Pu'lman's Book ofthe Axe, 387. 



Retrospective Review, 162. 458. 



Reumont's Carafas of Maddaloni, 210. 



Roll of the Household Expenses of 

 Richard de Swinfield, 458. 



St. George's Visitation of Northumber- 

 land, 21. 



Scott's Poet's Children, 505. 



Smee on the Eye, 338. 



Smith i Sydney), his writings, 554. 



Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Ro- 

 man Geography, 66. 



Southey's Works and Correspondence 

 of Cowper, 313. 339. 



Stratford Shakspeare. by C. Knight, 90. 



Strickland's Lives of the Queens, 162. 

 313. 339. 458. 554. 



Tieck's Midsummer Night, 289. 



Timbs's Curiosities of London, 21. 



Trollope s Illustrations of Ancient 

 Art, 162. 



Ure's Dictionary of Arts, &c, 288. 



Waagen's Treasures of Art in Great 

 Britain, 433. 



Wadnington on John Penry the 

 martyr, 410. 



Wiff'en's Tasso's Jerusalem, 387. 



Zeitschrift fur Deutsche Mythologie 

 und Sittenkunde, 505. 



Books, on mutilating, 585, 



varnish for old, 423. 



Booty's case, 137. 



Bosvill (Ralph) of Bradbourn, Kent, 467. 



Botanic names, their derivation, 537. 



Bothy system, 305. 432. 527. 



Botiller (Theobald le), 336. 



Bourbons, the fusion ofthe, 323. 431. 



Bowly (Devreux), horologist, 173. 285. 



*Bovle family, 494. 



•Braddock (Gen.) noticed, 11. 562. 



Bradford (John) the martyr, his writings, 



449. 552. 

 *Bragge (Dr.) noticed, 126. 

 Braithwait (Richard), 163. 

 Branks, or gossips' bridles, 149. 336. 578. 

 Brass in All Saints, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 



273. 

 Brasses, monumental, on their destruction, 



268. 326. 



Breeches Bible, an imperfect one, 273. 



*Brerewood (Edward), his portrait, 173. 



Bribery, the first instance, 447. 



•Brighton old church, hand in chancel, 

 148. 



Brill near old St. Pancras Church, 288. 



*Bristol compliment, 541. 



•Britons, works on the early, 399. 



Brooks (Rev. Joshua) noticed, 64. 



Broom at the mast-head, 518. 



Brothers of the same christian name, 43. 

 185. 



Brown (Robert) the separatist, 494. 572. 



Brown iSir Adim and Sir Ambrose), 564. 



Browne (Francis) noticed, 41. 



Browne (Sir T.) and Bishop Ken, 220. 



Bruce, Robert I., his acts and life, 452. 



Brydone the tourist, his birth-place, 138. 

 255. 305. 4j2. 496. 



Buckle, its meaning, 576. 



•Bunn's Old England and New England, 

 451. 



Bunyan (John), his manuscripts, 104. 125. 



descendants, 223. 



Buonaparte's abdication, 51. 183. 



Burial in erect posture, 88. 279. 407. 



Burial service tradition, 451. 550. 



Burke (Edmund), his domestic letters, 9. 

 207. 



Burnet (Bishop), his character, 448. ; no- 

 ticed, 175. 



Burton family, 19. 183. 



Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, 191. 333. 



•Butler (Colonel) noticed, 422. 



Butler's Lives of the Saints, various edi- 

 tions, 360. 



•Button Cap, his legend, 272. 



" -by," as a termination, 136. 522. 



Byron and Rochefoucauld, 347. 553- 



Byron's Childe Harold, 481. 



Byron, the fifth Lord, noticed, 18. 232. 



Cabbages, when introduced into England, 

 424. 578. 



Calchanti, its meaning, 36. 84. 183. 



Caldecott's Translation of the New Testa- 

 ment 600. 



Calves'-head club, 15. 88. 



Cambridge Mathematical Questions, 35. 

 184. 338. 



Cambridge Supernatural Phenomena So- 

 ciety, 150, 



Camden Society Annual Meeting, 433. 



Memorial on the Prerogative Office, 



215. 



Came, its early use, 82. 112. 



Campbell (Thomas) quoted, 73. 



Canaletto's views round London, 106. 288. 

 337. 



Canne's Bible of 1756, 563. 



Cant, origin ofthe word, 103. 



Canterbury see, its privileges, 286. 



Canting arms, 1»6. 256. 



Caps at Cambridge, 27. 130. 



Captain, Latinized, 543. 



" Captivate," its original meaning, 8. 



Carausius, his supposed coin, 148. 287. 



Carcases, productions of different, 227. 



Caricature : A Canterbury Tale, 351. 433. 



•Carlos (Sir Wm.), his arms and motto, 10. 



Carlos or Careless (William), monumental 

 inscription, 305. 



Card of the kings, 53, 



Carronade,,its derivation, 246. 408. 



Cash, its derivation, 66. 



Cassie, a corruption of Causeway, 396. 574. 



Cassiterides, origin ofthe name, 64. 111. 



Cassock ofthe clergy, 101. 337. 479. 



Cattle, disease among, 445. 



Cawley the regicide, 247. 361. 



Celt, its derivation, 86. 



Celtic and Latin languages, 14. 137. 356. 

 492. 



Celtic etymology, 40. 136. 205. 



•Celtic in Devon, 373. 



Cephas, a binder, and not a rock, 368. 500. 



