FIRST SERIES. 



69 



Hopton (Arthur) quoted, v. 346. 



Hopton (Lady), Ernie's letter respecting, iv. 97. 



Horace, lib. iii. ode 8. 1. 18, Baxter's note on, x. 327; 



Pope's translation, i. 230; with engravings, xii. 87. 

 Horae, notes from fly-leaves of, xii. 341. 

 Hordys, its meaning, i. 157.404. 

 Horkey, or howkey, its meaning, i. 263. 457. 

 Hornblowing, the custom, v. 148. 307. 

 Hornbooks, ""ii. 167. 236; iii. 151. 

 Hornby (Mary) dramatic writer, vii. 474. 

 Homchurch, wrestling for boar's head, v. 106. 187. 

 Home (T. H.) and Junius's Letters, xii. 22. 

 Homeck (Dr. Anthony), his letters, iii. 117. 

 Homer (Eliz.), tiied for witchcraft, xi. 498. 

 Horner (Lady Elizabeth), iv. 131. 197. 

 Horning, letters of, or writs of assent, ii. 393. 449. 

 Homing, the Geneva painter, vi. 339. 

 Horn.s, Moses represented with, i. 383. 419, 420; ii. 91; 



" To give a man horns," i. 383. 456 ; ii. 90. 

 Horns, swearing on the, iii. 342; iv. 84; xi. 409. 

 Homs of a river, i. 383. 419. 

 Hornsey, its derivation, xi. 409. 

 Horology, best work on, iv. 175. 240. 356. 

 Horrocks (James), iii. 421. 475; xi. 319. 

 Horse: " Give him a roll," viii. 287. 

 Horses, law of, i. 421 ; torn by horses. See Culprits. 

 Horses and sheep, remains of, in churches, v. 274. 



453. 

 Horse's skull dressed with ribbons, i. 173. 245. 

 Horses' tails, on docking, v. 611; vi. 43. 109. 

 Horsley (Bishop) on Calvinism, viii. 9. 

 Horton (Mary), noticed, v. 584. 

 Host buried in a pyx, x. 184. 333; xi. 374; shedding 



blood, vi. 127. 304. 

 Hoste (Paul), his scientific views, iv. 474; v. 89. 

 Hotchpot, its legal derivation, viii. 413. 

 Hotel Dieu, Paris, habit of its nuns, vii. 477. 

 Hothams of Yorkshire, iv. 346. 

 Houghton (.John), iii. 1 64. 248. 

 Hougoumont, a corruption, iv. 313. 456. 

 Hougomont, letters respecting, viii. 293. 

 Houlbrook (Wm.), Marlborough blacks:nith, x. 286. 

 " Houmout," motto of the Prince of Wales, iii. 106. 

 Houndsditeh, origin of the name, ii. 100. 

 Hounds' Pool, in Dean Prior, ii. 515. 

 " Hour and the man," origin of the phrase, v. 371. 

 Hour-glass, dramatic representations by, viii. 410. 

 Hour-glass in pulpits, vii. 589; viii. 82. 209. 279. 



328. 454. 525; ix. 64. 135. 162. 252; x. 38. 362; 



xi. 18. 473; xii. 19. 

 Hour-glasses buried with corpses, v. 223. 

 Hours, MS. Book of. Hen. VII., i. 276. 

 -House, surnames ending in, xi. 187. 249. 

 House-marks, vii. 594; viii. 19. 62. 135. 231. 256. 

 House of Commons. See Common4. 

 Houston (Thom.as), xi. 86. 173. 

 " Houd maet of laet," translated, ix. 148. 257. 

 Hoveden's Annals, errata, vii. 495. 579; viii. 11. 290. 



637; ix. 113; prophecy in, viii. 284. 

 Hovellers, or Uhvellers, vi. 412. 588. 

 Howard (Henry), Earl of Surrey, Poems, i. 440. 471. 

 Howard (John), medal presented to, iii. 142; monu- 

 ment, xi. 408. 472. 

 Howard (Lord), alias Belted Will, x. 341. 



Howard (Lord of Efnngham), was he a Papist? iii. 18.". 



244. 287. 309. 

 Howard (Sir George), descent, v. 538. 

 Howard (Sir Robert), ii. 248; MS. of " Conquest of 



China," v. 225. 281. 477. 

 Howards of Great Howard, their pedigree, iv. 133. 

 Howe (Captain) related to Geo. H., iii. 353. 438. 

 Howe (Mary), v. 226. 281. 



Howel (Laurence) his Desiderius, or the Original Pil- 

 grim, iii. 352. 

 Howell (James) " Familiar Letters," philological notes 



from, xi. 338; reprint suggested, xi. 338. 475. 

 Howe.s (Edmund), vi. 199. 

 Howgill (Francis) noticed, i. 400. 460. 

 Howitzer, its derivation, xii. 286. 311. 

 Howkey, or Horkey, i. 263. 457 ; ii. 10. 238. 

 Howleglass, The Life of, iv, 170; epitaph, ix. 83. 

 How land (John), xi. 484; xii. 18. 

 Howlett (Bartholomew), engraver, i. 321 ; vii. 69. 

 Hoxton, supposed origin of the name, ii. 100. 

 Hoyle, its meaning, and family name, vii. 237. 

 Hoyvill family, xi. 444. 

 Huant le Puisne, painter, v. 346. 

 Hubbub, its derivation, viii. 391. 

 Hue's Travels, viii. 516; ix. 19; xii. 459. 

 Hudman (Harry), of Gloucestei', iv. 311 ; vii. 27. 

 " Hue and Cry!" xi. 185. 

 Huel, its meaning, xi. 447. 

 Hues on the Globes, earliest edition, iv. 384. 

 Huet's Navigations of Solomon, vii. 331. 438; ^iii. 399. 

 Huff (Mother), noticed, v. 151. 

 Hugger-Mugger, its origin, viii. 341. 391. 503. 

 Hugii Lupus, Eari of Che.ster, vi. 100. 249. 

 Hugh (Sir), his ballad, viii. 614; xii. 496. 

 Hughes (John), tragedy " Amalasont," x. 266. 413. 

 Hughes (Margaret)^ i. 60. 200. 

 Hugo (Herman), iv. 404. 

 Huguenot, its derivation, vi. 317; in Ireland, vi. 16. 



423; xi. 267. 333. 

 Huguenots ofthe Cevennes, xi. 487. 

 Huguetan (Peter), his bequests, x. 307. 394. 

 Hull, dog-whipping days at, viii. 409; ix. 64; Duke of 



Monmouth's letter to the corporation, xi. 45 ; plans 



of, viii. 160. 227; Holy Trinity Church, viii. 638; 



Sulcoates Gote, x. 402. 493. 

 Hulls, inventor of steam-boats, iii. 23. 69. 

 Human body, its mutability, vi. 129. 

 Humble, its pronunciation, viii. 54. 229. 298. 393. 551. 

 Humble pie, i. 54. 92. 168. 

 Humboldt (Charlotte), inquired after, xii. 29. 

 Humboldt's " Asie Centrale," xi. 203 ; " Cosmos," v. 



224. 

 Humbug, its early use, vii. 550. 631; viii. 64. 161. 



232. 422. 494. 575. 

 Humming ale, viii. 245; x. 15. 

 Humphrey (Laurence), preface to Junius's Homer, v. 



554. 

 Hunchback styled " My Lord," vi. 102. 

 Hundred weight, ver. 112 lbs., i. 173. 

 Hungarians in Paules, viii. 441. 

 Hungerford (Antony), family, v. 396. 

 Hungerford (Edward), xii. 287. 410. 

 Hungerford (Lord), arms, iv. 345. SOS- 

 Huns and Frisians, xii. 263. 



