FIRST SERIES. 



87 



Mewe (Wni.)> rector of Eastington, xl. 147. 



Mews, its derivation, iv. 20. 



Mews (the King's), ii. 211. 



Mexican grammar, v. 585; vi. 19. 108. 



Mexico, anticipatory worship of the Cross in, vii. 548. 



629; viii. 132; Inquisition, i. 352. 

 Meyrick (Sir Samuel), his furniture at Goadrich Court, 



ix. 80; "Ancient Armour," erratum, i. 266. 342. 

 Michael (St.) and All Angels, festival, i. 202. 235. 

 Michael's (St.) Mount, Cornwall, bells, xii. 131. 215; 



tales, vi. 144. 

 Michaelmas goose, jv. 230. 291; viii. 368. 

 Michnee and Pylos, forts at, vii. 495. 

 Mickleton, epitaph on John Bonner, vii. 379. 

 Microscope, the best treatise upon it, i. 217. 

 Microscope, an oxy-hydrogen, xii. 495. 

 Microscopic writing, xi. 242. 293. 333. 

 "Midas, or the Surrey Justice," a print, x. 51. 155. 



275. 

 Middle ages. See MedicevaL 



Middlesex Archjeological Society, xii. 155. 255. 462. 

 Middlesex monumental brasses, xi. 340. 

 Middleton church, Essex, dedication, v. 372. 

 Middleton, co. Essex, America, xi. 463. 

 Middleton (Conyers) and Charles Leslie, ix. 324. 575; . 



X. 33. 135. 

 Middleton (Countess of), v. 394. 

 Middleton in Lancashire, brass at, xi. 340. 

 Middleton (Middleton), xii. 303. 414. 

 Middleton (Mrs.), residence at Isleworth, xii. 87. 

 Middleton (Richard), " Epigrams and Satyres," iv. 272. 



411. 

 Middleton (Thomas), Tragi-Comedy, " The Witch," its 



music, ix. 196; Works, by A. Dyce, xii. 44.3. 464. 

 Midgley (Richard), vii. 380. 438. 

 Midridge, myth of, ii. 509. 

 Midwives licensed, ii. 408. 499 ; iii. 29. 44. 

 Milan, its derivation, vi. 128. 

 Milboume (Luke) and Dryden, ix. 563; his metrical 



Thomas a Kempis, xi. 264. 

 Milbum (Leonard), xii. 145. 

 Mildew in books, ii. 103. 173. 236; iii. 29; in pictures, 



xi. 146. 

 Mile, English, in Leland's Itinerary, xii. 125. 195. 

 Milesian, the term explained, iv. 175; v. 453. 588. 

 Milesians, their origin, iii. 353. 428. 

 Militia officers and their precedence, xii. 347. 

 Military bands in the last century, xii. 121 ; execution, 



i. 246. 476; music, viii. 80; records, ix. 546; xi. 



236. 275; titles, x. 30.5. 433. 511; xi. 30. 

 Milkmaids of the last century, iii. 367 ; iv. 73. 

 Miller (Abraham), last survivor of Wolfe's army,Ti. 577 ; 



viii. 6. 

 Miller (Dr. George), Consecration Sermon, xi. 125. 231 ; 



Donnelan Lectures, vii. 527. 631 ; Philosophy of 



History, iii. 137. 

 Miller (James), dramatic wi-iter, ix. 496. 

 Miller (Joe), disinterment of his remains, v. 271 ; 



epitaph, by Stephen Duck, 485 ; play-ticket by 



Hogarth, xi. 303. 375. 427. 

 Miller (Mr.) of Craigentinny, v. 468. 

 Miller (Philip), gardener, x. 487. 

 Miller (Sir Thomas) MSS. in liis possession, i. 39. 489. 

 " Miller's Melody," old ballad, v. 316. 591. 



MiUes of Suffolk, arms, x. 164. 275. 332. 

 Milns (William), noticed, xi. 57. 

 Milton (Sir Christopher), the poet's brother, i. 366. 

 Milton (John), and Nupoleon, xii. 361. 414. 



amours, x. 30. 



Anglo-Saxon scholar, iv. 100. 181. 



Arcades, ii. 115. 



at Eyford-house, Gloucester, viii. 290. 



Boswell's and Malone's notes on, x. 28. 



Bradshaw's (President) relationship, viii. 318. 



Calve's-head club, iii. 390. 484. 



Coleridge's lectures on, X. 1. 



Comus, ii. 148. 



" Defensio pro Populo Anglicano," notes in, i. 165.' 



descendants, viii. 339. 630. 



elegy on the Marchioness of Winchester, xi. 477; 

 xii. 138. 



epitaph in Cripplegate church, v. 361. 548. 



expressions " sleek," " bullish," iii. 241; iv. 394f 

 V. 140. 



Familiar Correspondence, viii. 640; ix. 504. 



flogged by Dr. Ch.appell, iv. 341. 



II Penseroso, ii. 115. 153. 345. 



indebted to Tacitus, v. 606; vi. 20. 85. 



L'Allegro, i. 286. 316; ii. 52; viii. 249. 



Letter to Mr. Hartop, xii. 205. 352. 



Lines on his blindness, ix. 395; xii. 65. 113. 



Lucifer's palace, v. 275. 352; ix. 233. 



Lycidas, i. 386; ii. 246; vi. 143; viii. 497. 



Malatesti's Dedication to, ii. 246; viii. 237. 295. 



Manuscripts in State Paper Office, xii. 282. 



Minor Poems, i. 316. 386. 



mother, x. 264. 



mulbeny-tree at Cambridge, x. 46. 216. ! 



Nativity Ode, iii. 36. 



Paradise Lost, its supposed origin, vi. 19 5. 293. 

 374; its original cast, viii. 388; Book ii. 2, vi. 

 342; in Prose, vi. 340; vii. 27. 



Parr (Dr.), on Milton's devotional habits, viii. 433. 



pedigree, i. 366. 



portraits by Richardson, x. 8. 



Ptolemaic astronomy, xii. 207. 



rib-bone, v. 369. 



Rome described, xi. 25. 



Sir Henry Wotton, vii. 7. 111. 140. 



Sonnet attributed to him, iii. 37. 141, 142; xii. 

 344. 



watch, X. 290. 



Walton's (Sir Henry), letter to Milton, vi. 5. 



widow, her family, vii. 596; viii. 12. 134. 200. 

 375. 452. 471. 544. 594; ix. 38. 225; xi. 18. 

 109. 



Works, Bohn's edition, i. 483; ii. 24; Pickering's, 

 i. 427;ii. 21. 92. See Books. 

 Milton (Richard), inquired after, i. 366. 

 Milward (Sir Thomas), portrait, iii. 8. 

 Minar's Books of Antiquities, i. 277; ii. 344. 412. 

 Mineral acids, viii. 339. 

 Miners burning out a delinquent, iii. 123. 

 Minerva, order of, i. 88. 

 " Mines de I'Orient," xi. 227. 

 Ministerial changes of 1801 and 1804, x. 262. 

 Ministers, Prime, their casualties, xii. 388. 

 Minium, or red pencil of Abp. Parker, iii. 492. 



