FIRST bERIES. 



77- 



Lack-a-daisy, its etymology, vi. 535; viii. 62. 



Lactantius, poem ot The Plioenix, i. 203. 235. 283. 



Lacy (Count Maurice Tanner de), iv. 382. 



Lad, its derivation, vii. 256; viii. 210. 



Ladies and wives, xii. 61. 15ii. 195. 



Ladies' arms borne in a lozenge, vii. 571; viii. 37. 83. 



277. 329. 448. 652. 

 Ladies styled baronets, v 536. 

 Lady-Bird, why called BLshop Barnaby, i. 28. 55. 73. 



87. 131. 1!)4. 295. 

 Lady -day in harvest, vi. 290. 350. 399. 424. 471; vii. 



191; in 1800, xi. 226. 

 Lady fights at Atherton, iii. 143. 

 Ladylift, a clump of trees, ix. 53. 

 Lady of the, ring, its meaning, v. 296. 

 Lady restored to life, xi. 146; xii. 154. 215. 314. 

 Lady's trees, iii. 206. 



Laerig, its derivation, i. 292. 387. 460; ii. 463. 

 " La garde meurt," &c., origin of the saying, vi. 11. 85. 



377. 

 Laird of Brodie, viii. 103. 232. 



Laird of Grant," exclamation of extravagance, ii. 309. 

 " Laissez faire, laissez passer," author of the axiom, i. 



308. 390. 

 Lake family, xi. 282. 

 Lake (Dr.), misreading in his Diary, v. 275. 309; vi. 



495. 

 Lake (Sir Thomas), i. 186. 325. 

 Lalys, the .irchitect, v. 271. 



Lamb (Charles), birth-place, ix. 562; Coleridge's letters 

 to, vi. 117; X. 463; epitaph, iii. 322. 379. 459; iv. 

 ' 61; Essay, unpublished, viii. 55; Farce of Mr. H — , 

 xi. 223. 414; lines quoted by him, vii. 286. 438. 

 Lambarde (William), vii. 208. 

 Lambe' (Edward), mural tablet, x. 267. 528. 

 Lambe (Samuel), merchant, xi. 224. 

 Lambe (\Vm.), founder of Lamb's Conduit, i. 85. 

 Lambert (Major-Gen.), the regicide, iv. 339; v. 227; vi. 



103. 183; vii. 237. 269. 364. 459. 

 Lambert's Mews, vi. 169. 



Lambeth palace. Turner's view of, vii. 15. 89. 118. 

 Lambeth wells, i. 395. 

 Lambing season, x. 180. 

 Lambs, bive and chute, i. 93. 474 ; omens respecting, v. 



293. 

 Lamech killing Cain, vii. 305. 362. 432. 489; viii. 305. 

 Lameness, miraculous cures for, ii. 514. 

 Lamia, a she-devil, xi. 514. 

 Lammas Day, its origin, ii. 88. 

 Lammer-beads, iii. 84. 100. 115. 229. 

 Lamp, perpetual, iv. 501 ; v. 87. 211. 

 Lamp: the saying " Smelling of the lamp," i. 335. 371. 

 " AafiiraSiou Spafiaros" its origin, xi. 465; xii. 18. 



235. 373. 

 Lampoon, its etymology, ix. 362. 



Lancashire, its cultivation of geometry, ii. 8. 57. 436, 

 monumental brasses, xi. 500; record, x. 165; sayings 

 vi. 174. 351; song, x. 158. 

 Lancaster (Abp.), cure for the gout, viii. 6. 

 Lancaster (Duchess of), is the Queen so called, v. 320. 



423. 

 Land, custom when purchasing, xii. 406. 

 Land, right of devising, xi. 145. 234. 354; xii. 145. 

 Lands held by tenure, xii. 146. 



Land Holland, ii. 267. 345; iii. 30. 70. 229; v. 330, 

 Land of Green Ginger in Hull, viii. 34. 160. 227. 303. 



522. 606; x. 174. 

 Landed and commercial policy of England, i. 59. 91. 

 Landlords in Lonsdale, vii. 330. 

 Landwade church, iii. 39. 102. 

 Landwehr, national defence, xii. 287. 

 Lane, its derivation, viii. 366. 

 Lane (John), Tom Tel-Troth's Mes.sage, i. 126. 

 Laneham, or Lana.n (Robert), i. 302. 

 Lanesborough (George, 1st Viscount), viii. 564. 

 Lanfranc and Odo, xi. 383. 

 Langbaine's Dramatic Poets, annotated by the Rev. 



Rogers Ruding, ii. 407. 

 Langbury Hill tumulus, xii. 364. 432. 

 Langholme fair proclamation, iii. 56. 156. 

 Langley in Kent, its prophetic spring, ii. 244. 

 Langley's Polidore Vergile, iii. 137. 

 Langstrath (.James), his deed, x. 259. ' 

 Lanquet's Chronicle, viii. 494. 

 Lansallos beil, xi. 1 00. 293. 

 Lansdowne House, i. 436. 



Lansdowne (Marquis of), sympathy with literaiy talent,^ 

 xii. 200. 



Lansdowne MSS., poem mentioned in vol. Ixi., i. 12. 



Lantern-jaws, x. 53. 116. 273. 474. 



Lanthorn, its inventor, vi. 11. 



Laodicean Council, canon xxxv., viii. 7. 87. 



Lapel of barristers' gowns, ix. 323; x. 38. 213. 



Lapide (Cornelius h), exposition of Ex. vii. 22, ix. 512. 



Lapwing and the vine, viii. 127. 



Larch tree, vi. 269. 350. 444. 



Largesse, its modern use, v. 557; ix. 209. 408. 



Lascar, the blind, xi. 241. 



Lass, its derivation, vii. 256; viii. 210. 



Latchford, plague stone at, vi. 58. 



Latebrosus, its translation, xi. 163. 



Latimer, or Latymer, arms, xi. 166. 314. 



Latimer (Bp. Hugh), brothers-in-law, vii. 477. 



Latin: Latiner, vii. 423. 622. 



Latin plays by Cambridge alumni, xi. 147. 



Latin vocabulary, xi. 242. 310. 



Latinius Latinus, in Moore's Journal, xi. 362. 



Latinized episcopal titles, anecdotes of, iv. 392 ; proper 

 names, xi. 27. 114. 



Latitudes assigned by Ptolemy, xi. 225. 



Latitudinariaiis, xii. 262. 



Latres, or laternes, its derivation, vi. 109. 



Latten-jawed, provincialism, x. 53. 116. 273. 474. 



Latymer (Thomas), his interment, ix. 278. 



Laud (Abp.) and Prynne, v. 314; Conference with 

 Fisher, iii. 224; Church Government, an unpublished 

 MS, iii. 158. 199; letters and p.apers, v. 179; sup- 

 posed forgery of Article xx., iv. 87. 



Launch of the " Prince Royal" in 1610, ix. 464. 



Launching query, viii. 127. 



Lauragnois (Due de), story of his wife, ix. 538. 



Laureatship, epigram on, x. 263. 412. 452. 



Laurence (Abp.), editor of " Annual Register," xii. 92. 



Laurence (Dr. PVench), xii. 471. 



Laurent (Mathurin), " Le Compere Mathieu," vi. 1 1 . 



111. 181; ix. 480. 

 Laurie (David) on Finance, viii. 491 ; ix. 42. 



Lava, its average depth, xi. 426. 



