FIRST SERIES. 



89 



to him, ii. 274. 451; iv. 58. 125. 211. 457; Works, 



Amsterdiim edition, xii. 303. 394. 

 Montcalm (Lewis Joseph de), his monument at Quebec, 



V. 186. 

 Montchesni family, iii. 518. 

 Monte di Pietk, iii. 372. 524. 

 Montebourg abbey, vi. 77. 

 Monteith bowl, ix. 452. 599; si. 374. 

 Moiitfort arms, x. 386. 



Montgomery (Alex.), " Cherrie and the Slae," xii. 384. 

 Montgomery (James), on the loss of the Blenheim, xi. 



465. 493. 

 Montgomery (Sir Hugh), iv. 206. 254. 

 Monthly rules in old French, xi. 83. 

 Monthly rhymes, iv. 130. 203; v. 392. 463; vi. 448. 



592. 

 Montmartre, its etymology, viii. 468. 

 Monton, or Monkton, in Pembroke, iv. 371; v. 164. 

 Monumental brasses, their destruction, ix. 268. 326. 



See Brasses. 

 Monumental effigies, xii. 372; figures cross-legged on 



the Continent, ix. 77; inscriptions, their preservation, 



X. 62 ; symbolism, iii. 449 ; iv. 72. 209. 

 Monumentarium Anglicanum suggested, iii. 14. 116. 



217.313. 417. 513. 

 Monuments, record of existing, iii. 14. 116. 217. 313. 



417. 513. 

 Moon, its sex, vi. 232; circle round it, ii. 434; x. 463; 



xi. 39; xii. 460; its cycle, iv. 102; divination, vii. 



177; influences on plants, &c., v. 486; vi. 64; x. 7. 



156; on the weather, viii. 79. 145. 321; ix. 430; 



X. 95. 

 Moon, finding the time of the new, xi. 166. 235; first 



glance at the new moon, v. 485. 

 Moon, Man in the, v. 468; vi. 61. 182. 232. 424; ix. 



184; xi. 82. 334. 493. 

 Moons, two full moons in July, 1852, vi. 172. 227. 

 Moonlight causing putrefaction, iv. 273. 332. 355. 

 Moore (Arthur) and the Moores, ii. 297; xi. 157. 177. 



197. 295. 

 Moore (Francis), proctor of Lichfield Cathedral, viii. 



271. 

 Moore (Francis) and his Almanack, iii. 263. 339. 381. 



466; iv. 74. 162. 

 Moore (Sir John), monody on his death, i. 321. 445; 



V. 138. 583; vi. 15. 80. 158. 274. 

 Moore (Sir Thomas), author of " Mangora," ii. 297. 

 !Moore (Thomas), first poetic elFusion, vii. 565; error in 



his Journal, xi. 262 ; lines on Mrs. Tighe, x. 225. 



375; notes from his letters, 165; wife's sister, xi. 



241. 

 Moore of Abingdon, xi 428. 

 Moorfields in Charles Il.'s time, iii. 260. 

 Moorish ballad, xi. 324. 415. 

 Mop, its meaning, iv. 190. 

 Moral philosophy, works on, ix. 351; x. 53. 

 Morani (Sir John), pedigree, ix. 56. 250. 

 Morant (Kev. Philip), lineage, ix. 34. 

 Moravian hymns, iv. 502; v. 30. 63. 94. 113. 165. 249. 



474. 492. 

 Morayshire folk lore, xi. 239. 

 Mordaunt (Charles), Earl of Peterborough, portrait, v. 



441. 521. 

 Mordaunt family, genealogies of, vi. 553; vii. 50. 



More, a root, explained, vii. 401. 



More (Hannali), letter, x. 460; on female education, 



xii. 101. 

 More (Sir Thomas) and John Fisher, iv. 417; date of 



his knighthood, 417; epigram on, vii. 85; ix. 420; 



X. 173. 393; Latin Poems, xi. 428; Works, xi. 324. 



516; xii. 36. 

 Morell ( Dr. Thomas) , his book-plate in a copy of ^Escby lus, 



v. 604; vi. 125. 322. 373. 

 Morellam and migranatam explained, x. 187. 

 Morgan fainily arms, xi. 87. 213. 

 Morgan (Henry), bishop of St. David's, vi. 203. 

 M.;rgan (Lady) and Curry, ii. 30. 

 Morgan (Professor De) " Book of Almanacs," vi. 432. 



519. 

 Morganatic marriages, ii. 72. 125. 231. 261. 

 Morlee ar.d Lovel, their trial, viii. 51. 

 Morley (Thomas), his Madrigals, iv. 185. 

 Mormonism, vii. 153. 548; x. 535; xi. 263. 

 Mormonism and Spalding's Romance, v. 560. 

 Morning Advertiser, established, i. 75. 

 Morning Chronicle newspaper, i. 7. 75. 

 Morning Herald newspaper, i. 7. 75. 

 Morocco (Emperor of), pensioned by England, x. 342. 



510. 

 Moroni's portrait of Mary Queen of Scots, vi. 100. 

 Morrice (Sir William), his papers, ix. 7. 

 Morris (Kev. Thomas), Nonjuror, iv. 37; v. 354. 

 Morrison (Thomas), of New College, Oxford, xi. 342. 

 Morrow of a feast, viii. 412. 

 Morse : " As Morse caught the mare," origin of the 



saying, i. 320. 

 Morse (Nicholas), iii. 185. 250. 

 Mortality in August and September, x. 304; xi. 93. 

 Mortar, its derivation, xii. 286. 311; bronze, 345. 440. 

 Mortella towers, ii. 9. 110. 173. 

 Mortimer (Henry), noticed, vi. 174. 

 Morton (Countess), the witch, vii. 260. 

 Morton (Dr.), his library, ii. 70. 

 Morton (John), epitaph, vi. 358. 

 Morton (the Drs. liichard), v. 227. 473, 

 Mortuary stanzas, ii. 309. 

 Morwenstow church, bosses in, x. 123; Hues on the 



Minster, ix. 17. 83. 135. 

 Mosaic, explained, iii. 389. 469. 521. 

 Moseley, inscription in the old hall, vi. 291. 

 Moten (Julius), " Legend of the Cross-bill," iv. 346. 

 Moses represented with horns, i. 383. 419, 420. 

 Moses, the royal donkey, viii. 488. 

 Mosquito country, i. 425. 

 Jlossom (Bishop), v. 176. 

 Mother Carey's chickens, v. 344. 427. 

 Mother Grey's apples, ii. 88. 

 Mother Kussel's post, ix. 299. 



Mothering Sunday, xi. 284. 353. 372; xii. 214. 229. 

 Mothers, early Cliristian, vii. 548. 

 Motheis of eight and twelve years of age, xii. 184 



374. 

 Moths called Souls, iii. 220. 

 Motte (Benj.), publisher, xii. 60. 198. 358. 490. 



Mottoes ; — 



from St. Augustine, i. 93. 104. 189. 340. 

 Banner, i. 230; iii. 8. 



