52 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Erskine (Lord), his brooms, i. 93. 138. 



Ertenki Mani, Persian pictures, xii. 264. 330. 



Escubierto, Capateiro da Bandarra on, v. 584. 



Escutcheon at Fawsley, v. 297. 331. 



Escutcheons, x. 265. 



Eshe, its etymolopy, xi. 425. 495; xii. 74. 150. 



Esholt priorv, ii. 268. 344. 412; iii. 86. 



Espin (Thos.), bis mausoleum, vi. 448. 



Espousals, or betrothing, vii. 595; viii. 14. 574; pre- 

 ceding marriage, ix. 33. 84. 



Esquire, amount of property constituting one, iii. 242. 



Esquire and gentleman, i. 437. 475. 491. 



Esquires of Charles I., v. 126. 



Essays, English prize, competition for, ii. 479. 



Essex, broad oak, v. 10. 40. 113; County MSS., xii. 

 362. 454; monumental brasses, xi. 220. 



Essex Buildings, Strand, i. 180. 



Essex (Earl of), and " The finding of the Eayned Deef," 

 ii. 103; expedition to Ireland, iv. 191. 



Estates^ the realm, the three, iv. 115. 196. 278; v. 

 129. 539; vi. 592. 



Ethical writers, xi. 188. 



Ethnology of England, vii. 135. 246. 



Etiolated, its derivation, xii. 186. 234. 373. 



Etiquette, origin of the word, ix. 106. 



Etna, Brydone's ascent, x. 131. 268. 



Eton, early deed relating to, xii. 279. 



Eton College, frescoes in. ii. 55. 



Eton Montem, i. 261. 306. 321. «84. 390. 473. 492; ii. 

 150; v. 557. 621; vi. 63. 110. 



Eton school library, viii. 298. 



Etruria, sewerage in, i. 180. 



Etruscan bronzes found at Canino, xi. 88. 



Etten (Van), Iiis "Recreations," xii. 117. 



Etty (Wm.), the artist, iii. 496; iv. 27. 



Etymology, direct and indirect, i. 331. 



Etymological notes, ii. 276. 



Etymological traces of our ancestors, vii. 13. 90. 343. 



Etymologies, uncertain, vi. 434. 588; vii. 43; x. 398. 



Etiquette, points of,' viii. 386. 527; x. 207. 404. 514; 

 xi. 325. 455. 



Eucharist, a Pope's dispensation to receive it in ale, 

 v. 467. .062. 



Eucharist, tlie alt.r-side for administering it, viii. 292. 



Eucharistic wine, 1370 — 1387, xii. 363.477; admi- 

 nistered to weak children, iii. 179. 320. 368. 



Euclid and Aristotle, ii. 479. 



" Eugenia," by Hayes and Carr, vii. 237. 



Eulenspiegel (Till), translations, vii. 357. 416. 507. 

 557. 609 ; ix. 88. 



Euler's analytical treasures, ix. 75. 



Eupatoria, its derivation, x. 490. 



Euphitecia Linariata, an insect, iv. 101. 141. 



Euphormio, i. 27; vii. 430. 



Euripides, passages from, viii. 198; xi. 226. 291. 



European sovereigns, genealogy of, i. 92. 119. 250. 282. 

 339. 



Eustace (St.), his legend, iv. 52. 



Eustache de St. Pierre, vii, 10. 329. 



Eustacius, abbot of Flay, iii. 141. 307. 381. 



Eustachius Monaehus, was he in Guernsey? v. 322. 



Euxine, or Black Sea, xi. 102. 283. 393. 



Eva, Princess of Leinster, vi. 388; vii. 188. 



Evangelistic symbols, i. 385. 471 ; ii. 12. 45. 205. 364. 



Erans (Edward), Catalogue of Engraved Portraits, v. 

 261. 



Evans (Dr. John), v. 611. 



Eve, etymology of the name, viii. 655. 



Evelyn (John), his Memoir, by Dr. Warton, i. 285; in- 

 scriptions on his tomb, viii. 329. 



Events, great, from slender causes, x. 202. 294. 394. 



Evergreens in churches, iii. 118; iv. 109; vi. 487. 



Evil, work on its origin, iv. 346. 



Evil eye in Scripture, x. 415. 



Evona's (St.) choice, i. 151. 253. 



Ewe (Earl of), xii. 146. 



" Exaletation of Ale," poem attributed to Beaumont, 

 i. 146. 



Exchange, the New, in the Strand, i. 451. 



Exchequer, cursitor barons of, vii. 479 ; postman and 

 tubman, v. 490; Lord Mayor counting hob-nails at, 

 vii. 157. 



Exchequer Records, their destruction, xii. 63. 



Executions deferred, v. 422; vi. 170; military, i. 246. 

 476; superstitions connected with, xi. 503; xii. 53. 

 96. 



Executions by burning, xi. 222. 373; by hanging sur- 

 vived, X. 233; under singular circumstances, iv. 191, 

 243. 284. 317; in Henry VIIL's reign, vi. 510. 



Executors of wills, origin, xii. 124. 208. 



Exercist day, vii. 205. 344. 



Exeter cathedral, armorial bearings in, ii. 424. 479. 

 493; emaciated figure in, vi. 345. 520; its clock in- 

 scription, iii. 329. 



Exeter controversy, v. 296. 351. 499. 



Exeter Lammas fair, "Vii. 559. 



Exhibition, the Great, of 1851, a monster number of 

 " Notes and Queries," iii. 361; Chaucer's prophetical 

 view of it, iii. 361; hint for protecting, iii. 166; Offi- 

 cial Catalogues and Hand-books, iv. 459. 



Exhumation ominous to a family, ii. 4. 



Exons of the guard, iv. 87. 



Exposition by Cornelius k Lapide, ix. 512. 



Expurgatory Index. See Index Expurgatory. 



Extradition explained, iii. 119. 169. 



" Extraordinary North Britain," its writers, iii. 409. 

 432. 



Eye, primary idea attached to it, viii. 25. 204. 



Eye, the evil, viii. 142; x. 415. 



Eyes, green, viii. 407. 592; ix. 112. 432; x. 174; xi. 

 70. 



Eyemouth, in Berwickshire, vii. 24. 



Eyford House, Gloucestershire, viii. 290. 



Eyre (Capt. John), his drawings, vii. 545; ix. 207. 258. 



Eyres (Major), of the Knightsbridge volunteers, vi. 129. 

 185. 



Ezzelin, picture of, vii. 453. 513. 



Families, numerous, v. 126. 138. 204. 282. 304. 357. 

 548; vi. 106. 208. 303; vii. 547; ix. 186. 419. 422 

 572; X. 94. 422. 522; xi. 9. 214. 223. 



Families, origin of, xii. 166. 



Family, a remarkable one, xi. 404. 



•' Family Journal," its author, vii. 313. 392. 



