42 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Daysman, its etymology, i. 188. 267. 419; v. 497. 



D. C. L., honorary degree, viii. 8. 86. 162. 



D.D. title, i. 438; ii. 13; v. 453. 



" De Amore Jesu," xi. 466. 



Deacon (Dr. Thomas), nonjuror, xii. 85. 



Deacon (Wm. Frederick), liis Works, xi. 447. 



Deacons, its meaning in Foxe, v. 228. 473. 



Dead, burning the. i, 216. 308; change in appearance 



of the, ii. 435; salting their bodies, iv. 6. 43. 162. 

 Dead, Society for burning the, ix. 76. 287. 

 Dead letter, origin of the term, iv. 345. 

 Dead men speaking, x. 87. 215. 

 " Dead men's fingers," a flower, x. 226. 

 Dead Sea, conflicting notices of, xi. 79. 

 Deal, its meaning, iv. 88. 161. 

 Deal, how stained, vii. 356. 465. 558. 

 Dean Street, Soho, music-room in, i. 395. 

 Dean (Thomas), Fellow of University College, v. 199. 

 Deane (John), xii. 384. 



Deans (Jennie), her energetic character, iv. 434. 

 Deans, rural and urban, iv. 502 ; when first styled Very 



Reverend, iii. 352. 437. 

 Dean's Yard, Westminster, ii. 290. 

 Death, a bill of exchange, vi. 36; curious notice of one, 



xii. 341 ; high spirits, a presage of, ii. 84; (See Folk- 

 lore. Death omens); prophesyingbefore, ii. 116. 196. 

 : 435; ix. 550; punishment of, by burning, ii. 6. 50. 



90. 165. 260. 441. 498; iii. 123; representations of, 



iii. 450. 501; iv. 27; v. 213. 

 Death and Shoreditch burial board, xi. 185. 

 Death and sleep, iv. 435; ix. 346; x. 229. 356. 412. 

 Death-bed mystery, ii. 51. 356; superstition, i. 315. 



350.467; ii. 356. 

 Death of Death's painter, iii. 495. 

 Death on the fingers, viii. 362. 

 Death-warnings in families, ix. 55. 114. 150. 335. 

 Death-watch, v. 537. 597; vi. 87. 

 De Beauvoir family, ii. 254; pedigree, ix. 349. 596; x. 



51. 

 Debenture and imprest, ii. 40. 76. 106. 

 De Bure (J. J.), sale of his library, viii. 434. 

 De Burgh family, vii. 381. 



De Burgh's Hibernise Dominicana, xi. 504; xii. 35. 

 Decalogue, its division, iii. 166. 230. 412; iv. 63; in 



churches, x. 387; in Common Prayer, xi. 425; in 



ten lines, v. 607. 

 Decalogue, to be repealed as obsolete, ix. 562 ; x. 36. 

 " De Castro and his Brother Bat," its author, vi. 603. 

 De Caus (Solomon), his musical notes, v. 507. 

 De Caut family, xi. 166. 



" Deceitfulness of Love," inedited poem, viii. 311. 

 De Chair (Rev. Edw.), Vicar of St. Pancras, x. 367. 

 Deck of cards, ii. 405. 



Declaration, "Third, of the Prince of Orange, vi. 272. 

 Declaration of 2000 clergymen, v. 610; vi. 21. 

 De Clares family, v. 204 282. 300. 357. 371. 

 Decrees by the Congregation of Indexes, xi. 165. 

 Decretorum doctor, iv. 191. 242. 

 Dedham, U.S., its population, xi. 324. 390. 

 Dedication crosses, viii. 201. 

 Dedications of books, i. 259. 326. 

 Dee (Dr.), petition to James I., i. 142. 187; date of his 



death, x. 444; why did he quit Manchester? i. 216. 



284; ii. 151. 



Dee river, its divinity, viii. 588. 

 Deeds, original, temp. James I., x. 258. 

 Deeds, title, their utility, vi. 554; value of old ones, xii. 

 185. 236. 274. 408; stolen from Capt. Livingstone, 

 xii. 365. 

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

 Deering (Dr. Charles), i. 375. 

 " Defender of the faith," origin of the title, ii. 442. 481 ; 



iii. 9. 28. 94. 157. 

 De Foe (Daniel), his anticipations of modern ideas, iii. 

 137. 195. 287. 338. 



Coleridge's opinion of, iii. 136. 



connection with the Mercator, iv. 338. 



couplet by him, ii. 310; iii. 45. 



descendants, v. 392. 476. 



ghost stories, i. 241 ; ix. 12. 62. 



Gravesend boats, ii. 209. 395. 



house at Stoke Newington, iv. 256. 299. 



polemical writings, x. 260. 279. 



project for purifying the English language, iii. 350. 



Robinson Crusoe, x. 345. 448. 



sale of his Works, i. 78. 110. 



Septennial Bill pamphlet, v. 577. 



Tour through Great Britain, i. 158. 205. 

 " Deformed Jessy Bell," &c., xii. 366. 

 Degradation from orders, vi. 318. 

 Degrees, American, v. 177; B. C. L., its privileges, vi. 

 534; vii. 38. 167. 222; D.D., i. 438; ii. 13; v. 453; 

 French and Italian, v. 79; honorary, viii. 8. 86. 162; 

 M.A. and A.M., ix. 475. 599; x. 74. 332. 

 Degrees in Arts, at Edinburgh, ix. 304. 

 Degrees in law, academical, x. 160. 

 Degrees, prohibited marriage, afiixed in churches, iii. 329. 

 Degrees, the Song of, ix. 121. 376. 473. 

 De Gurney pedigree, ix. 324. 

 De Hoyvill family, xi. 444. 

 De HumiUtate, a manuscript, v. 610. 

 " Dei Gratia," omitted on the new florin, .118. 

 Dekker (Thomas) "Four Birds,'" x. 222; "Raven's 



Almanack," i. 400. 454. 

 De la Beche family, monuments, v. 341. 450. 

 De la Fond, an inscription on bis engraving, ix. 272. 

 De la Rue's pamphlet-binder, xii. 307. 

 Delamere (Henry Booth, Lord), vi. 175. 

 Delamere (Lord), ballad of, ii. 104. 158; v. 243. 348. 

 De Laune (Dr. Wm.), president of St. John's, x. 30. 

 Delaune family, xii. 166. 235. 498. 

 Delaval (Miss), Poems, viii. 171. 

 Delawarr (John West, 1st Earl of), his memorial stone 



of Rufus, vi. 264. 343. 581. 

 "Delicate Investigation," suppressed, v. 201. 354. 

 " Delighted," as used by Shak^speare, ii. 113. 139. 183. 



200. 234. 250. 329; v. 164; viu.241, 288. 437. 

 Delft manufacture, viii. 125. 

 Dell, in what county? iv. 39. 

 Delia Cruscan writers, xi. 302. 

 Deloraine (Lady), Pope's Delia, ii. 479; xi. 301. 

 Deluge, traditions of the, xi. 284. 354. 

 De Missy (Caisar), iv. 153. 

 Demonological query, xi. 107. 

 De Montfort arms, x. 386. 

 Demoralised, its present meaning, x. 486. 

 Demosthenes and the New Testament, iii. 350. 397. 

 437; oration against, iii. 141. 227. 



