■0 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Hunt (JefFry), tobacco-pipe maker, si. 37. &3. 



Hunt (Leiub), his Journal, xi. 166. 235. 276; sonnet 



on tiie poets, i. 122. 

 Hunlbach manuscripts, ix. 149. 



Hunter (Joseph), the loss of Sliakspeare's MSS., i. 54. 

 Hunters of Polmood, peiiigree, ix. 198. 

 Huntincdon, it-s population, vil. 39; sturgeon, x 525; 



witchcraft lecture, x. 144. 

 Huntinjxdon (Lord), descent, vi. 533. 

 Huntington familv, xii. 104. 

 Huntsman, the Wild, i. 363. 

 Huntyng of the Ruinish Fox, v. 448. 

 Hupfeld's work, " Von der Naiur," viii. 34. 

 Hurd (Bishop), biography wanted, iii. 496. 

 Hunah! and war ciics, ii. 322; vi. 5-'i ; vii. 59.5. 633; 



viii. 20. 88. 185. 255. 277. 323. 422. 561 605; ix. 



386. 

 Hurst (Thomas), bookseller, ii. 90. 

 Husband and wife eating off the same plate, xii. 245. 



295. 

 Husbandman, its original meaning, xi. 86. 154. 

 Hutchinson (Lucy), iv. 65. 

 Hutchinson (Mudame). vi. 481. 



Hutchinson's Commercial Restraints of Ireland, x. 244. 

 Hutin (Lonis le) explained, viii. 199. 

 Hutten (Uhieh von), iiis '' E))istiil8e Obscurorum Viro- 



nim," ii. 54. 121 ; portraits, i. 232. 303. 336. 

 Hutter's Polyglott, vii. 1,?4. 

 Hutton (Roliert), his burial, x. 233. 

 Huyghens (Constantine), English poems, iii. 423. 

 Huyghens (M. Charles), viii. 519. 

 Hyde, its measurement, viii. 366. 

 Hyde (Edward). See Clarendon. 

 Hyde (Mrs.) alias the tub-woman, vii. 133. 211. 634; 



viii. 19: ix. 45. 

 Hyde Park Corner, i. 436. 

 Hydro-incubator, ii. 84. 

 Hydropathy, ix. 395. 575; in the last century, x. 28. 



107. 153. 275. 376. 

 Hydrophobia, cure for, ix. 322. 

 Hydrophobic patients, alleged cure for, vii. 379; dipped 



in water, vi. 238; vii. 221 ; smothered, v. 10; vi. 110. 



206. 298. 437. 

 Hyena, an ingredient in love potions, vii. 177. 

 Hylles's Arte of Vulgar Arithmeticke, iii. 409. 

 Hymmalayas, query from the, viii. 339. 

 Hymn-book wanted, xi. 124. 

 Hymns, anonymous, xii. 11. 153. 213. 519. 

 Hypertautology, examples, iv. 151. 301. 

 Hyphenated title, v. 124. 

 Hyphenism and hyphenization, iv. 203. 

 Hyrne, its meaning, v. 152. 211. 

 Hyta, was he a Spaniard or a Moor? v. 467. 



I often substituted for J, v. 391. 



I. H. S. monogram, ix. 259. 



Ice, artificial, x. 290 414; xi. 39. 94. 215; aii. 17; 

 ground, how formed, v. 370. 448. 516. 



Iceland, best mode of reaching, iii. 371 ;iv. 59; com- 

 munications with, ix. 53. 



Ich dien, motto, iii. 106. 168. 



Icicle, its old spelling, xi. 323. 435. 



'* I'd be a butterfly," Latin version, xi. 304. 435. 



Idol worship, viii. 413. 



Igdrasil ash, viii. 40; xi. 344. 



Ightham, bees at the Mote, xii. 488. 



Ignatius's Epistles, edited by Cureton, iii. 138. 



Ignorance and superstition, iv. 53. 



Ignore, its etymology, iii. 169. 



Hand, chest, i. 173. 



He, Ivel, and Yeo, their etymology, xii. 285. 



Hive (Jacob), his forgery of the Book of Jashcr, v. 41.5. 



Illegitimate children named from their fathers, xi. 242. 



313.352.392; xii. 294. 

 Ill-luck averted, x. 224. 355. 

 Illuminations in cities, origin, vii. 571. 

 " Illustrium Poetarum Flores," suggested as a reprint, 



viii. 242. 

 Ilmington, pear-tree at, vi. 507. 

 Ilsley family arms, xi. 87. 

 Iltutus (St.), his bell, vi. 389. 

 Imagination, its early culture, iii. 38. 73. 152. 

 Imbosk, its meaning, xi. 447. 

 I-membred: "a girdle i-membred," its etymolofry, ii. 



153.170. 

 Immaculate conception, doctrine, ii. 407. 449. 

 Immoral works, their preservation, vii. 66. 

 Imp, used for progeny, viii. 443. 623; ix. 113. 527. 

 Imperseverant, its etymon, vii. 400. 

 Impossibilities of our forefathers, viii. 559. 

 Imprest, derivation, ii. 40 76. 106. 

 Imprints, remarkable, ix. 143. 

 Improbus, its meaning, xi. 163. 251. 

 Incantations at cross roads, vi. 75. 137. 

 Incense used in the Roman Church, xii. 495. 

 Incest, curious instances of, iv. 20. 105.' 

 Incident on " Virtue," xi. 63. 134. 269. 

 Inckle, a coarse tape, v. 398; xi. 351. 

 Incumbents of church livings, i. 61. 91. lOG ; ii. 278 ; 



their longevity, xii. 469. 514. 

 " Indefatigable," and '• Les Droits de I'Homme," xii. 39; 

 " Independent WJiig," periodical, x. 280. 

 Index essential to a book, v. 51 ; vi. 334: Encyclopaedia 



of General Indices suggested, ix. 371. 526. 

 Index, Society for compiling a General, x. 356. 

 Index Expurgatory, ii. 37. HI; of 1607, iv. 440.487; 



V. 33; decrees by the Congregation, xi. 165; first, 



final, and suppressed volume, v. 82 ; recent, x. 163. 



267. 

 Index Geographicus, xi. 27. 

 India, and the telegraph and steam, viii. 559; works on, 



xi. 126. 

 Indian rubber, ii. 165; x. 204. 



Indians, their remedy for the bite of the serpent, viii. 39. 

 Indians, why Americans so called, i. 254. 491. 

 Infant prodigy, ii. 101. 439. 

 Infant scliool, Virgilian inscription for one, ix. 147; 



X. 254. 

 Infants in Scotland nameless until christened, viii. 468. 

 Infanticide, how punished, iii. 91; v. 43. 

 Infantry firing, iv. 407 ; v. 37. 

 Inference, instance of a false one, vii. 303. 

 Infernal war-machine, xi. 443. 

 " Infortunate," and " unfortunate," xi. 341. 



