112 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Gnotations : — 



Sum iiber, ot non sum liber, v. 152. 



Suum cuique tribuere, &c. iii. 518; iv. 28. 75. 



Te colui viitutem, &c., ii. 267. 



Tempora mutantur, nos et inutamurin illis, i. 215. 



234. 419. 

 Temptation and selfishness, s. 385; xi. 295. 

 The devil hath not in all his quivers' choice, x. 



288. .352. 

 The devil sits in his easy chair, x. 8. 

 The glory dies not, and the grief is past, xi. 66. 

 The knights are dust, is. 301. 402. 

 The lucky have whole days, i. 231. 351; iii. 69. 

 The man of law who never saw, iv. 153. 197. 

 The right divine of kings to govern wrong, iii. 



494; iv. 125. 160; v 128; vi. 564. 

 The soul's dark cottage, iii. 105. 154. 

 The spire whose silent finger points to heaven, ix. 



9. 85. 184. 

 The storm that wrecks the winter's sky, x. 288. 



35.3. 

 The very law which moulds a tear, xi. 302 394. 

 Then comes the reckoning, v. 585; vii. 189. 

 This world's wealth, &c. vi. 532. 

 Those days were never, xii. 494. 

 Though lost to sight, to memory dear, iv. 405. 

 Though with forc'd mirth we oft may soothe a 



smart, i. 174. 

 Three poets in three distant ages born, vii. 209. 

 Time is the stuff of which life is made, iv. 154. 

 'Tis a very good world to live in, ii. 71. 102. 156. 

 To-day we purpose, &c., iii. 302. 397. 

 To die for what we love, vi. 245. 

 To know ourselves diseased, viii. 219. 421. 

 Too wise to err, iii. 279 ; viii. 539. 

 Trail through the leaden sky, viii. 494. 

 Triumphant leaders at an army's head, xi. 302. 

 Trumpeter unus erat, xii. 226. 286. 479. 

 Truth is that which a man troweth, iv. 382. 455. 

 'Twas they unsheath'd the ruthless blade, v. 10. 



380. 

 'Twas whisper'd in heaven, v. 214. 258. 522. 

 Veni, vidi, vici, viii. 400. 

 Venit ad Eupliratem, v. 512. 572. 

 Virgin wife and widowed maid, viii. 56. 230. 

 Vita crucem, et vivas, ix. 505. 

 Vox audita pent, litera scripta manet, v. 200. 237. 



361; xii. 204. 

 Vox et prasterea nihil, i. 247. 419. 421. 

 We hope, and hope, and hope, iii. 448. 

 Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest, ii. 



134. 188. 

 Well of English undefiled, x. 495. 

 We've parted for the longest time, viii. 388. 

 What does not fade ? viii. 366. 

 What saith the whispering winds ? x. 288. 

 What sent the messengers to hell ? vi. 76. 

 What shadows we are, xi. 187. 251. 314. 

 When Greek joins Greek then was the tug of war, 



i. 211. 

 When meekness beams upon a Thurlow's brow, x. 



288. 

 When we survey yon circling orbs, viii. 515. 

 Whene'er I ask'd for blessings, vii. 66. 



Quotations : — 



Where England's monarch all uncovered sat, 3. 



415.4.58. 

 Which maidens dream of, xi. 105. 

 Who drives fat oxen, xi. 245. 315. 

 Who from the dark and doubtful love to run, v, 



512. 570. 617. 

 Whoe'er has travell'd life's dull round, vi. 414. 



464. 

 Wilderness of monkeys, viii. 413. 

 Wise above that which is written, v. 228. 260. 



305. 

 Wise men labour, good men grieve, ix. 468. 553. 

 Woman's will, vi. 10. 



Words are men's daughters, iii. 38. 110. 154. 

 Words given to man to conceal his thoughts, vi. 



575; vii. 164. 248. 311. 509.' 

 Worm is in the bud of Youth, iv. 86. 162. 

 You, friend, drink to me, friend, iv. 59. 197. 

 Your erffo copulates strange bedfellows, xi. 206. 



Quotations, Dictionary of Hackneyed, iv. 149. 405 ; v. 



41. 

 Quotations, on verifying, vi. 326. 408. 



E. 



Rab surdam (resurgam), ii. 493; iii. 42. 193. 



Rabbit, as a symbol, v. 487. 597. 



Race, in ship-building, its meaning, ii. 72. 



Race-course, early notice of, iii. 519. 



Racine (John), his annotations in books, i. 52. 



Rack, in Shakspeare's Tempest, iii. 218; iv. 37. 121. 



158. 193; V. 390. 

 Rackets, or Racquets, xii. 244. 308. 

 Radish feast at Oxford, v. 610. 

 Radix, its derivation, ii. 362. 

 Rag Sunday in Sussex, iii. 42.5. 

 " Ragged staff," the Leicester badge, viii. 290. 

 Ragman Rolls, or Domesday Book of Scotland, iv. 7. 



213. 

 Railway, earliest, x. 365; xi. 92; accidents in America, 



xi. 263; literature curiosities, vii. 427; signals, vii. 



380; travelling foretold, viii. 34. 65. 

 Rain, early, called '' the pride of the morning," ii. 309; 



iii. 484. 

 Rain, fall of in England in 1815—1839, i. 173. 235; 



in 1852, vii. 130; sign of, ix. 53. 

 Rain water a cure for sore eyes, v. 223. 

 Rainbow, a remai-kable one, x. 228 ; called " risus plo- 



rantis Olympi," ii. 89. 

 Rainbow in the morning, i. 413. 451. 

 Rainbow, odour from, iii. 224. 310; viii. 158. 

 Rjiised, an Americanism, iv. 83; vi. 423. 

 Raleigh (Sir Walter), bust, i. 76; in Virginia, iv. 190. 



241. 448; family property, xi. 262; "History of 



the World," fate of Vol. II., iii. 105; vii. 287; ring, 



V. 533; '"Silent Lover," xi. 101. 171; snuff-box, v. 



78. 136; "Soul's Errand," iv. 274. 353; vii. 175. 



343; styled " Our English Milo," viii. 495; supposed 



scepticism, viii. 267. 

 Ramasshed, its meaning, iii. 347. 434; v. 572. 

 Ramsay (Allan), authorship of his Poems, xi. 466. 



