04 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Nbrember 17th, cnstom, iv. 344. 



Noviomagus, city of, xi. 303. 



Nowell (Dean), Catechism, A-ii. 64; his first Tvife, ix. 



300; colloquy with Queen Elizabeth, vi. 510. 

 Noy (Wm.), an eminent lawyer, i. 211. 

 Nugent (Earl), " Poems," ix. 149. 

 Nugget, its meaning, vi. 171. 281; vii. 143. 272. 3S6. 



393; viii. 375. 481;ix. 232. 

 " Nullus," and " Nemo," two tracts, iv. 153. 244. 

 Numbers, calculations of, ix. 492. 

 Numerals, Arabic, i. 230. 279. 307. 358. 367. 433. 



435; ii. 27. 61. 339. 413. 424. 470; Indian, ii. 294. 

 Nnmismatic queries, i. 468 ; ii. 42. 238. 

 Nun, the father of Joshua, iv. 193. 

 Nun (St.), her well in Cornwall, x. 397. 

 Nuneham Regis, discovery at, vi. 386. 488. .558; Tii. 



23. 507; viii. 101. 

 Nuns acting as priests, x'u 47. 154. 294. 346. 454; 



their calligraphic labours, i. 114. 

 Nuns of the Hotel Dieu, vii. 477. 

 Nunting table, its meaning, vii. 133. 

 Nuremburg token, v. 201. 260. 450. 

 Nursery games, i. 401 ; vi. 241 ; rhymes, i. 401 ; ii. 135; 



vi. 480. 601; vii. 455; viii. 452. 605; xi. 206. 3ia 



474. 511 ; xii. 35. 90. 135. 233; tale, vii. 8. 

 Nursrow, origin of the word, viii. 538. 

 Nut-tree manured by beating, xii. 365. 

 Notcelle monasteiy, x. 287. 376; xi. 152. 271. 

 Nychars, or Nichar, xii. 10. 501. 

 Nykke, or Nix (Richard), bishop of Norwich, inctirred 



a prajmunire, v. 308. 



0. 



Oak, how to clean, vii. 620; viii. 45. 58. 

 Oaks, celebrated, iv. 402. 488 ; v. 43 ; their age, x. I47 ; 

 xi. 1 6 ; veneration for, viii. 468. 632. 

 Cadenham, vii. 180. 

 Essex broad, y. 10. 40. 113. 

 Hankford's, v. 43. 

 Reformation, vi. 254. 422. .588. 

 Shelton, v. 43; vii. 193. 297. 

 Watch oaks, vi. 486. 614. 

 Oak and the ash, prophetical, v. 534. 581; vi. 5. "50. 



71. 144; on their leafing, ^^. 241. 

 Oak chest, inscription on, vi. 8. 

 Oak-web, or cock-chafer, iii. 259. 

 Oaken tombs, viii. 179. 454. 



Oakley (Rev. F.) his Catholic Flonst, vi. 503 ; viii. 585. 

 Oakley Woods, inscription in, viii. 76. 129. 

 Oasis, its pronunciation, v. 465. 521 ; vi. 62. 520; vm. 



410. 

 Gates (Titus), autograph, ii. 464; iii. 27; Dryden's 



allusion to him, vi. 485. 



Oaths as taken by the English and Welsh, viii. 364. 



471. 605; ix. 45. 61. 402; x. 271; xi. 232; forms 



of judicial, vii. 453. 532; inviolability of, iv. 91 ; -nn- 



lucky for pregnant women, iv. 151. 214; v. 393; 



viii. 503. 



Oats: " Wild oats," origin of the phrase, v. 227. 306. 



" Ob. q." meaning of this abbreviation, v. 127. 188. 



Obeism, iii. 59. 149, 150. 309. 376; iv. 228. 



Obelisk betwefen Yarmouth and Gorleston, v. 78. 



Objective and subjective, v. 1 1. 42. 141 ; ix. 170. 



Oblations, or alms, vi. 316. 444. 



Oblige, pronounced obleege, x. 142. 256. 356. 



Obnoxious, its diiFerent meanings, viii. 439. 



O'Brien (Nelly), viii. 440. 



O'Brien of Thomond, ix. 125. 328; xii. 301. 



" Observator" paper, its editor, iii. 323. 



" Observator Revived," paper, its editor, iii. 323. 



" Obtains," its legal use, ix. 589; x. 115. 255. 472. 



Occasio, or Opportunity, described, iii. 8. 43. 92. 124. 



140. 286. 

 Occleve (Thomas), his portrait of Chaucer, ii. 442. 

 Occult transposition of letters, i. 416; ii. 77; iii. 69. 

 Occultations, lunar, vi. 73. 176. 257. 

 O'Connor (Arthur), v. 579. 

 O'Connor (Dr. Bernard), xii. 289. 

 Ockley (Simon), his History of the Saracens a spurious 



work, ii. 277. 

 Octagonal font, xii. 126. 



Od, how this agency is tested, iii. 517; iv. 150. 

 Odd Fellows, their origin, ix. 327. 528; x. 75; work 



on, X. 75. 

 Odessa, why spare it? xi. 45. 

 Odevaere's history of an ancient clock, ix. 302. 

 Odoberty (Morgan), viii. 11; ix. 209; x. 96. 150. 233. 

 O'Donovan's Review of Spenser's State of Ireland, v. 



439. 

 Odyllic light, vi. 75. 

 Oes, the fifteen, iii. 391. 467. 



Oettinger (M.), his Bibliograpliie Biographiquc, i. 42. 

 Off, its meaning and derivation, vi. 388. 

 Officer, its early use, x. 305. 

 Offices, sold in the 17th century, ix. 562. 

 Ogbome (Mrs. E.), MSS. of History of Essex, ix. 322. " 

 Ogden and Westcott families, x. 376. 

 Ogden (John), ix. 541. 



. Ogden (Dr. Samuel), ii. 73. 105, 106; vi. 37. 

 Ogliam characters, xi. 285; xii. 209. 

 Ogilby (John), " Britannia," i. 153. 

 Ogilvie (James), Essay on Property in Land, iii. 489. 

 Oglander (Sir Wm.), his chapel, ix. 17. 

 Oglethorpe (Owen), bishop of Carlisle, vi. 203. 

 Okely (Dr. Wm.), defends the Moravians, v. 249. 

 Okey (Colonel John), regicide, viii. 620. 

 " Olaus Magnus," noticed, iii. 370. 

 Olave's (St.) church, Southwark, iii. 373. 

 Olave's (St.), Crutched Friars, registers, i. 115. 

 Old Bailey, ii. 211. 

 " Old Dominion." See Virginia. 

 Oldenburg horn, ii. 417. 516; iii. 509. 

 Oldham (Bishop Hugh), vii. 14. 164. 189. 271; viii. 



183; descendants, xi. 64. 13.5. 

 Oldham (John), passage on " the virtues of impudence," 

 iii. 372; Bell's edition of his Works, x. 459; xi. 410. 

 Oldliam (Rev. George), xi. 409. 

 Oldham Mathematical Society, ii. 57; iv. 300. 

 Oldys (William), anagrammatic pun by, iv. 206 ; auto- 

 biography, v. 529 ; account of London libraties, iv. 176. 

 Oley (Rev. Barnabas), family and will, v. 372. 

 Olivarius (Petrus), " Valentinus de Prophetia," v. 60. 



161. 

 Ollones, its meaning, xi. 266. 

 Olney, its meaning, ^^i. 235. 

 Olympic Plain, ix. 270. 526. 

 O'Melachlin, king of Meatb, his daughter, x. 88. 



