82 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Lutestring : " To speak in lutestring," iii. 188 ; -viii. 



202. 523. 

 Luther (Martin) and Ignatius Loyola, iii. 137» 



bust at Frankfort, viii. 335; ix. 21. 



early knowledge of the Scriptures, ii. 230. 



epigram on, i. 27. 50. 



Hymns, ii. 327. 413. 500. 



inscription by, v. 441. 



New Testament, 1 John, v. 7, i. 399. 453. 



no iconoclast, viii. 335. 477. 



portrait at Wanvick Castle, i. 400. 45:7; one in 

 the possession of Mr. Home, vii. 498. 



relics, " a bit of his breeches," iii. 235. 



Eesponsio, passage cited, iv. 192. 

 Luther, Calvin, and Henry VIIL, sizaiu on, vii. 174. 

 Luttrell (Narcissus), his Diary, sii. 408. 

 " Lux fiat," earliest use, ii. 89. 

 Lychtenberger's Prognosticatio, iv. 233. 

 Lycian inscriptions, deciphering them, iv. 388. 486. 

 Lydd church, Kent, its stoup, vi. 591. 

 Lyde, its meaning, vi. 533. 

 Lydgate (Dan John), his biographei's, i. 379. 

 Lyme Regis Domesday, xi. 105. 

 Lyn, or Lia, its etymology, vi. 293. 353. 

 Lynch Law, its origin, iii. 24. 76. 

 Lynde (Sir Humfrey), " Via Tuta and Via Devia," xi. 



267. 

 Lyne (Richard), epigram on Woman compared .to the 



Moon, xii. 132. 176. 195. 

 Lyne (Rev. Richard), verses on St. Luke, vi. 507. 615. 

 Lynn parochial library, viii. 93. 



Lynn, South, churchwardens' accounts, iii. 435; panel- 

 ling inscription, iv. 407. 

 Lynne (Walter), i. 367. 474. 

 Lyon (Lord), King-at-arms, vii. 208. 

 Lyon (Wm.), bishop of Cork, ix. 192. 

 Lyon verse, iii. 290. 466. 507. 

 .Lyons, inscription at, iv. 502. 



" Lyra Apostolica," its authors and motto, ix 304. 407. 

 Lyra's Commentary, ix. 323. 503. 

 Lysons's manuscripts, ix. 57. 

 Lyte family, in Somersetshire, v. 78. 260. 

 Lyte (Henry), " Light of Brittaine," vii. 570. 

 Lytton (Sir E. B.) anachronism in his " Harold," xii. 



507. 

 Lyttelton family, xii. 346. 

 Lyttelton (Thomas, Lord). See Junius. 

 Lyttleton (Launcelot), noticed, iii. 330. 



M. 



"M. or N." in the Church service, i. 415. 476; ii.^l; 



iii. 323. 437. 

 Mabillon's charge against the Spanish clergy, i. 51 ; iv. 



275. « I 



Mabiotte (Jacques), who was he ? iv. 7. 

 Mac, the patronymic, vii. 202. 341. 

 Macarnes family, viii. 365. 572. 

 Macartneys of Longford, xii. 327. | 



Macaulay (T. B.) and Bishop Buniet, i. 40. 250. 

 account of the Duke of Monmouth, i. 8. 

 ballad of the Battle of Naseby, iv. 485; 'v. 41. 

 country squire, ii. 357. 



Macaulay, "History of England," weight of first edition of 

 vols. III. and IV., xii. 442. 

 on the Italian language, x. 420. 

 pseudo Tristam Merton, ix. 103. 334. 

 Young Levite, i. 26. 104. 167. 222. 374; vi. 194. 

 274; vii. 191; xii. 343. 

 Mac Carthy (Count), library dispersed, xi. 386. 

 JIac Cracken (Alex.), longevity, xii. 362. 

 Mac Culloch (Alex.), noticed, xi. 319. 

 Mac Culloch (Lieut.), vii. 127; xi. 256. 332. 

 JIacclesfield Grammar-School library, viii. 298. 

 Macclesfield (Lord), lines written at his house, xi. 289. 



392. 

 Mac Dowall family, viii. 563. 

 Macaronic poetry, v. 166. 251. 302. 

 Maceroni (Colonel), x. 153; xi. 35. 

 JIaces, spiked, in Great Malvern Abbey, viii. 254. 

 Macfarlane of that Ilk, v. 416. 

 Macfarlane (Waltei-), Geographical Collections, iv. 406. 



509. 

 Macgillivray (Professor), viii. 467. 584. 

 Jfeic Gregor (Helen), noticed, ix. 350. 

 Machell's MS. collections for Westmorland and Cum- 

 berland, iii. 118. 227. 

 Machiavelli (Florentine), his maxim, i. 83; ii. 318. 

 Machyn (Henry), noticed, ix. 483. 

 Mackay (John Ross), i. 125. 356. 

 Mackay (Rev. William), noticed, xi. 46. 

 Mackenzie (Khutor), noticed, xi. 146. 

 Mackenzie-Quin (Quin), his Rapid Calculation, xii, 5. 

 Mackerel, blind, ix. 245; xi. 295; when in season, 



ix. 536. 

 Mackeril's Quaker coffee-house, i. 115. 

 Mackey (Mary), her Poems, vi. 578; vii. 109. 

 Mackey (Samson Arnold), viii. 46^ 565; ix. 89. 179. 

 Mackintosh (Sir James), notes i^books, iii. 489; au- 



thore of the Rolliad, iii. 131 ; school fees, xi. 8. 

 Macklin (C.) and Pope, ix. 239 ; his ordinary and school 



of criticism, iii. 163. 

 Macklin's Bible illustrated, v. 351. 

 Mackmorough arms, ix. 398; x. 32. 

 Macky (John), Journey tln-ougli England, i. 205. 

 Maclane (Donald) and the riots of London, ii. 273. 



332. 446. 

 JIaclean (Laughlin), Sec Junius. 

 Maclean (Mr.), discovers raspberry seeds in a barrow, 



vi. 535. 

 Macmurrough (Dermot), his daughter Eva, i. 92. 163. 

 Macorovius, or Machoreus (Alex.), poem, "De Prailio 



Aveniniano," i. 186. 

 Macpherson's Gssian, its source, vii. 201. 

 Macrocosm, a work on the, vii. 402. 

 Madagascar poetry, vii. 285. 

 ]\Iadan (Martin), noticed, x. 313. 

 Madden (Samuel), " Reflections and Resolutions," iii. 



323; ix. 199. 

 Madeira, notes on, vi. 145. 

 Madoc, son of Owen Gwynedd, i. 56. 136. 

 Madoc's expedition to America. See Ammnca. 

 Madox (Thomas), historiographer, v. 440. 

 Madrid, Inquisition at, x. 120. 137. 2AG. 515; xi. 108; 



xii. 77. 

 Madrigal, its meaning, v. 104. 380. 

 Madrigals in praise of Queen Elizabeth, iv. 185. 



