48 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Eikon Basilike, i. 137; ii. 134.255; vi.361. 438. 607 

 Eiton, or Eden (Stephen), " Acta Regis Edward II.," i 



230. 

 " Ejusdem farinae," origin, iii. 278. 433. 

 Elder tree, superstitions respecting, vii. 1 77. 334. 437. 



488. 

 Eldon (Lord), anecdote of, x. 7. 

 Elections, list of contested, vii. 208. 316; viii. 208. 

 Electric clock, vii. 153. 



Electric telegraph anticipated, iv. 341; xi. 459; its 

 discoverer, viii. 78. 364; ix. 274; at police stations, 

 Lx. 270. 360. 

 Electrical phenomena, vi. 555; vii. 51. 

 Electricity applied to growth of trees, vi. 510. 

 Electrometer and the cholera, v. 319. 

 Electrotype, flexible moulds for, xi. 126. 

 Elephant, the African, x. 403. 

 Elfshot, its cure, iv. 500. 

 EUminate, its meaning, v. 317; ix. 119. 

 Elizabeth and Isabel, i. 439. 488; ii. 159. 

 Elizabeth (Queen), and Earl of Essex, ix. 175. 



and Sir Henry Neville, ii. 307. 



and Sir Philip Sidney, x. 241. 



alleged bastardy, vii. 528. 



Booke of Christian Praiers, vi. 32. 



chaplain at Woodstock, vii. 108. 



christening cloth, iii. 115. 



colloquy with Dean Nowell, vi. 510; vii. 25. 191. 



created Princess of Wales, iii. 477; iv. 24. 176, 



crown, xi. 400. 



domestic establishment, i. 41, 



education in her time, v, 296. 



epigram on, v. 78. 



equestrian figure, iv. 231; v. 235; vi. 519. 



grants from, xii. 185. 233. 255. 



Hentzner's description of her, x. 428. 



letters, ii. 102. 



lines on, v. 467. 



looking-glass, her <r«e one, viii. 220. 



love of pearls, vii. 355. 



madrigals in her praise, iv. 185. 



motto: " semper eadem," ix. 78. 



pet names for her attendants, v. 323. 



Philip II. of Spain, his letters to her, ii. 102. 



pictures in churches, i. 184. 



pictures of her tomb, vi. 9. 519. 



portrait painters, vi. 237. 



Primers of her reign, ix. 170. 211. 



Private Memoirs, iii. 23. 45. 197. 



proclamation against the Family of Love, ii. 1 7 

 49. 



scandal against, ii. 393. 500 ; iii. 11, 151. 197 

 225,285. 307; iv, 161. 



stature, v. 440. 



translation of Boethius, ii. 56. 169. 



visits Lord Bacon at Twiclvcnham, ii. 408. 468; 

 iii. 44. 



warrant to George Gower, serjeant painter, vi. 238, 



was she dark or fair? v. 201. 256; vi. 497; x, 

 52; xi. 195. • 

 Elk, fossil, of Ireland, ii. 494; iii. 26. 121. 212. 502. 

 ElHot (Mr.), binder of the Harleian MSS., viii, 335. 

 Elliott's library sold, xii. 266. 

 Ellis (Geo.), "Lamentation of the Lost Sheepe," xi. 386. 



Ellis (John), Under-Secretary of State to William I1I.» 



i. 245. 

 Ellis (Philip), vicar-apostolic, vi. 125. 298. 400 ; vii. 



242. 

 Ellises of Kent, xii. 266. 



Ellrake, or Hell-rake, iv. 192. 260; v. 162. 258, 

 Ells and Lee families, xii. 105. 155. 385. 

 Elly (Little), mythological tale, viii. 95. 

 Ellys (Ann), wife of the Bishop of St. David's, her 



elegiac verses, v. 387. 

 Elm at Hampstead, v. 9. 

 Elmstood parish register, extracts, x. 338. 

 Elphinstone (Lady), mother of thirty-six children, v. 



357. 

 Elstob (Miss), and her family, iii. 497; ix. 7. 200. 553; 



X. 17. 75. 295. 

 Eltham palace. Turner's view of, vii. 90, 118. 193, 

 Elvan, its meaning, v. 273. 

 Elvaston, or Aylewaston, its etymology, vi. 510, 

 Ely, Isle of, legend respecting, vi. 12. 

 Ely cathedral, inscription, iv. 116. 

 Elyot (Sir Thomas), viii. 220. 276. " . 



Emaciated effigies. See Effigies. 

 Emayle, red, explained, v. 467, 562, 563, 

 Ember weeks, their origin, vi. 194. 

 Emblem on a chimney-piece, viii. 219, 

 " Emblemata Horatiana," vii. 614. 

 Emblems, books on, vii. 16. 469. 579; viii. 13, 18, 88; 



X. 474 ; chapter on, iv. 403. 

 Embost, in hunting, ix. 4 59. 

 Emerald, its derivation, i. 282. 340. 

 Emerod, explained, i. 217. 282. 476, 

 Emerson (R, W.) on the soul, x. 481, 

 Emiott family arms, iii. 478. 

 Emouf (Gen.), letter to Gen. Beckwith, vii. 329. 

 Emphasis, ancient mark of, vi. 124. 

 Enareans,ix. 101. 337. 479. 

 Encaustic tiles from Caen, viii. 493. 547, 

 Encorah and Millicent, their meaning, iii, 448. 

 Encore, when first used, viii. 387. 524; ix. 601, '' 

 Encyclopajdia of Indexes, ix, 371. 526. 

 Encyclopaedias, omission of long treatises in, viii. 385, 



502. 

 Endeavour, the verb, i. 124, 154, 285. 373; ii.46. 

 Enemies, sale of, x. 383. 



Enfield palace and church, viii. 271. 352; ix. 287. 

 Engine-b,-verge, explained, vii. 619; viii. 65. 231. 

 England, A Character of, xii. 187. 247. 

 England, fall of rain in, i. 173. 235; its landed and 



commercial policy, i, 59. 91; travelhng in, i. 33. 68. 



87. 167. 220. 

 " England's Glory by a Royal Bank," xi. 385. 

 England (New), dialogue, x. 84; extracts from parish 



registers, 339 ; first book printed there, si. 87, 153, 



171. 230; its hymnology, vi. 579; Royal regi- 

 ment, 33. 

 Engelbert, archbishop of Treves, i. 214; iii. 291. 379. 

 Engelmann's " Bibliotheca Scriptorum Classicorum," ii. 



296. 312, 328. 397. 

 English, origin of, iii. 116. 

 English actors in Germany, ii. 184. 459. 

 English and early German literature, i. 428. 

 English-French, iii. 437, 

 English Kings, lines on their succession, iii, 168; iv. 



