120 



genp:iial index. 



Sealing-wax on fingers, vii. 475. 



Seamen's tickets, ix. 452. 



Searson (John), Poenis, vii. 131; viii. 176. 



Seats iri churches. See Pile. 



Seaward (Sir Edward), authorship of his Narrative, v. 



10. 185. 352. 

 Sebastopol, or Sevastopol, x. 444. 490. 492; xi. 515; 



fortifications, xi. 164; forts, x. 461 ; twenty years 



since, x. 342. 

 Secant, its meaning in Virgil, iv. 24. 

 Seeker (Abp.) and George III., ix. 447. 

 Sector, description of the, MS. notes in, xii. 26. 

 Secundus (Johannes) quoted by Parnell, iii. 135. 

 Sedan chairs, first used, xi. 281. 388. 

 Sedgmoor, battle, x. 320; submerged, xii. 405. 

 Sedile, magnum, iii. 142. 

 Sedilia in churches, iii. 142. 

 Sedilia and choirs, xii. 344. 392. 479. 

 Sedley (Catherine). See Duchess of BticTcingham. 

 Sedley (Sir Charles), a passage in his Poems, iii. 476; 



iv. 327. 

 Segantiorum Pottus, its locality, vii. 180. 246. 505. 

 Seguard (John), " Poems," iii. 261. 

 Sejanus, his Life, by P. Mathieu, ii. 215. 

 Selah explained, ix. 423; x. 36. 

 Selden (Jolin), his Titles of Honour, i. 351 ; error in 



Johnson's Life of Selden, 451 ; " Table Talk," xii. 



426; tombstone, x. 153. 

 Seldom-when, as used by Shakspeare, vii. 335. 

 Self-love, an arch flatterer, viii. 142; x. 415. 

 Selion, its derivation, iv. 258. 

 Selkirk (Alex.) and Robinson Crusoe, x. 448. 

 Seller (Abednego), noticed, v. 587. 

 Seller (John), " History of England," x. 509. 

 Selleridge, bookseller's charge for, ix. 146. 

 Selogo, a plant. See Samolus, 

 Selwyn of Friston, in Suffolk, xi. 63. 

 Sempecta, soldier-monk of Brabant, iii. 328. 357. 433. 

 "Semper eadem," motto, viiL 174. 255. 440; ix. 20. 



78. 

 Sempills of Beltrus, their Poems, iv. 343. 

 Senage, its meaning, iv. 6. 28. 

 Seneca, St. Pauls Epistles to, vii. 500. 583. 633; viii. 



88. 205. 

 Seneca's Medea, prophecy of the discovery of America, 



i. 107; iii. 464; iv. 300. 

 Senna, or Cennus, its Irish meaning, xii. 394. 

 Sense versus sound, xii. 61. 

 Senses, the seven, iv. 233; v. 521 ; x. 393. 

 Sephton church, pulpit inscriptions, xi. 134. 

 Sepia etchings, xi. 407. 

 Sept, its etymology, iv. 344; v. 277. 304. 

 September, 1792, no full moon, vi. 313. 

 September : " Thirty days hath September," v. 392. 



463; vi. 448. 592. • 



Septennial Bill, v. 77. 

 Sepulchral inscriptions in the condemned London 



churches, x. 19. 

 Sepulchral monuments, vi. 504. 608; ix. 514. 539. 



586; s. 42. 152. 194; xii. 372. 

 Sepulchre watching the, i. 318. 354. 403; ii. 270. 

 Sepulture, an ass's, ii. 8. 41. 

 Seraphim and Cherubim, xi. 467. 

 Sergeants, ribands of recruiting, xi. 11. 53. 



Seriopoli, its locality, i. 213. 



Serius, where situated, iii. 494; iv, 11. 124. 



Seijeant-Counters, their habit, vi. 399. 



Serjeant-painters, royal, vi. 239. 292, 



Serjeant-trumpeter, his privileges, v. 127. 



Serjeants' rings and mottoes, v. 59. 92. 110. 139. 181. 



563. 

 Sermon, a short one attributed to Swift, ix. 589. 

 Sermon bell, xi. 33. 



Sermon copying a felony, xii. 166. 231. 274. 

 Sermons delivered in the nave, ii. 95. 

 Sermons, preaching from written, iii. 478. 526; iv. 8. 



41. 237. 394. 

 Sermon (Dr. Wm.), his pills, ii. 438. 

 Serpents banished from Ireland, iii. 490; iv. 12; vi. 42. 

 400. 590. 



countries free from, iii. 490; iv. 260. 



eating, vi. 177. 



eggs, X. 508; xi. 271. 345. 393. 415; xii. 73. 



eggs and straw necklaces, i. 6. 24. 



notes on, ii. 130; iii. 490; iv. 12; vi. 42. 147.. 

 400. 590; viii. 39. 304; xi. 375. 



tongue, vi. 340; vii. 316. 537. 



water, x. 404. 



with a human head, iv. 191. 331; vi. 547; viii. 

 304. 



worship, iii. 309; viii. 41; xi. 375. 

 Serpents, the Isle of, x. 262. 

 Serpilius' Expuigatory Index, ii. 37. 

 Serrao (Father), noticed, xii. 185. 

 Servants, days fixed for hiring, ii. 89. 157; iii. 328; 



iv. 43. 

 Servetus and Calvin, ii. 152. 187; xii. 165. 

 Servetus, his Christianismi Kestitutio, xii. 165. 249. 



288. 367. 460. 509. 

 Servius, first Clusian king of Rome, xii. 300. 419. 

 Sessional papers, xi. 417. 

 Sestertium, the sum explained, xi. 27. 94. 

 Seth pillars, the legend, v. 609; vi. 65. 109. 

 Settle (Elkanah), " F'emale Prelate," v. 52. 

 Settle, in Yorkshire, caves at, viii. 412. 651. 

 Seven, as denoting an indefinite quantity, v. 532. 596. 



617. 

 Seven champions of Christendom, i, 418. 

 Seven Dials, ii. 211. 

 Seven Oaks and Nine Elms, viii. 34. 

 Seven Sisters legend, ix. 465; x. 112. 

 Seventh daughter of a seventh daughter, vi. 62. 

 Seventh son, peculiar attributes of, iii. 148, 149; v. 



412. 532. 572; x. 26; xii. 260. 

 Seventy-seven, coincidence respecting, xi. 61 ; xii. 35. 

 Se'v^rambes, Histoiie des, iii. 4. 72. 147, 148. 374; iv. 



43. 

 Seville cathedral, note from, vii. 258. 

 Seward (John), " Poems," iii. 261. 

 Seward (Miss Anne), her Works with MS. notes, i. 386. 

 Sewell, its meaning, iii. 391. 482. 505. 

 Sewell family, viii." 388. 521. 621; ix. 86. 

 Sewerage in Etruria, i. 180. 

 Sex discovered previous to birth, ii. 20. 

 Sexes, their separation in church, ii, 94; iii. 94. 288; 



v. 41. 539; ix, 336. 566. 

 Sexta Mtas Mundi, xi. 342. 414. 

 Sexton, a female, xi. 414. 



