FIRST SERIES. 



41 



Cutty-pipes, xi. 144. 235. 



Cwn Annwii, or Cwn Wybir, dogs of the sky, i. 294. 482. 



" Cybalum Mundi " of Bonaventure Des Periers, vi. 245. 



329. 

 Cybele and Sibylte, xi. 445. 515; xii. 110. 191. 248. 



414. 

 Cyclades, round towers of the, vii. 425. 

 Cycle of the moon, iv. 102. 

 Cyclopsedias, the best, xi. 148. 

 Cygne (Martin de), a learned Jesuit, x. 347. 

 Cynthia's dragon yoke, v. 297. 354. 

 Cypher advertisements, xii. 42. 112. 305. 413; inventor 



of a secret, ii. 494; motto on a coach, i. 214. 233. 

 Cypress trees in America, v. 1 14. 

 Cyprus described, xi. 22. 

 Czar, or Tsar, its derivation, viii. 150. 226. 422. 



D. 



D'Abrantfes (Duchesse), x. 29. 



Dacre (Lady), her almshouses, i. 180. 



Dacre monument at Hurstmonceaux, ii. 477; iii. 28. 



75. 124; iv. 354. 

 Dacres of the North, iv. 382. 

 Dadian, title of governor of Mingrelia, xii. 365. 

 " DafFy down dilly," nursery rhyme, iii. 220. 259. 

 Dagger-case, inscription on, vii. 40. 119. 

 Dagobert's (King), revenge, x. 508; xi. 253. 

 Dakyns of Linton, motto, x. 223. 327. 

 D'Albini (William), seal, vii. 452. 552, 

 Dale (Rev. Roger), xi. 105. 

 D'Alembert, bon-mot attributed to him, xi. 426. 

 Dalrymple (Hugh), his Works, is, 589. 

 Dalrymple (John, 2nd viscount), iii. 483. 

 Dalrymple (Sir J.), on Bishop Burnet, i. 40. 

 Dalston, its etymology, i. 352. 

 Dalton (Edw.), Doubting's Downfall, i. 77. 

 Dalton (Isaac), " The Shift Shifted," vii. 315. 374. 

 Dalyell (Sir J. Graham), iv. 35. 

 Damasked linen, ii. 199; iii. 13. 229; iv. 446. 

 Dameran (Governor), viii. 34. 

 Damian, inquired after, x. 165. 

 Damnable (Mother), v. 151. 255. 450; vi. 137. 

 " Dance of Death," its republication, viii. 76; x. 373. 

 Dancette'e lines, xi. 242. 308. 353. 391. 

 Dancing and dancing tunes, xii. 159. 234. 

 Dancing the bride to bed, ii. 442; vi. 586. 

 Dancing Trenchmore, explained, iii. 89. 437. 

 Dandridge the painter, ii. 442. 

 Danes in England, v. 369. 

 Daniel (John), of Clement's Inn, viii. 318. 

 Daniel (Samuel), poet, vi. 603; vii. 192. 344. 

 Daniel's Irish New Testament, ii. 310. 

 Danish names in England, vii. 536; viii. 58. 

 Danish and Swedish ballads, recent collections, viii, 444. 

 Dannocks, derivation, ix. 272. 

 Dante, was he ever at Oxford? vi. 98. 

 Dante and Tacitus, x. 240. 

 Dante in Latin, ix. 467; Lucardian, i. 155. 339. 

 D'Arc (Joan). See Joan of Arc. 

 Darcy (Eliz. Lady), parentage, xii. 168. 

 Darcy (Mainhardt Frederick), xii. 494. 

 Darcy (Sir John), lord-justice of Ireland, vii. 386. 



Darcy of Flatten, Meath, ix. 247. 



Darcy Lever church, ii. 494; iii. 27. 



Dare, to lurk, explained, vii. 542. 



Darell of Littlecote, his trial, xi. 48. 394. 



Daresbury, the Whitechapel of England, iii. 60. 229. 



Darics presented to East India Company, xii. 284. 



Darien, Isthmus of, vii. 351. ♦ 



Darling's Cyclopajdia Bibliographica, viii. 125; ix. 526; 



X. 373. 

 Darnale (Sir John), v. 489. 545. 610. 

 Darnley (Catherine), Duchess of Buckingham, iii. 224. 



249. 280. 506. 

 Darnley (Henry Lord), birth-place, i. 123. 220. 

 Dart river, lines on, ii. 511. 

 Dartmouth (1st Lord), monument, ix. 51; remarks on 



Bp. Burnet, i. 40. 

 Darwin (Erasmus) on Steam, ix. 271. 408. 

 Dates of published works, ix. 148. 

 Daubez (Rev. C), family and works, vi. 527 ; vii. 52. 



144. 

 Daugh, or Davach, its meaning, vii. 128. 

 Daughter pronounced dafter, viii. 292. 504. 

 Daughters taking their mothers' names, viii. 586; ix. 



20. 230. 

 Daundelyon (John de) and Margate tenor-bell, i. 92; r. 



319. 404. 

 Dauphin of France, iv. 149. 195. 

 D'Auvergne (Philip), vii. 236. 296. 

 Davenant (Sir Win.) his Spaniards in Peru, iv. 257. 456. 

 Daventry, duel at, viii. 78. 



David, king of Israel, his mother, viii. 539; ix. 42. 

 David and Goliath, representations, xii. 46. 96. 

 David II. of Scotland, his german-brother, vii. 331. 

 David, king of North Wales, iv. 120. 

 David (St.) order of, in Wales, ix. 125. 

 Davies, or Davys (Sir John), marshal of Connaught, 



vii. 39. 

 Davies (John), author of Sir Martin Mar-People, i. 302. 

 Davies (Sir John) lawyer and poet, arms, iii. 409 ; bio- 

 graphers, iii. 82. 336; monument, iv. 256. 327; v. 



331. 

 Davies (Professor T. S.), his death, iii. 46.,' 

 Davies (T. S.) " Magnetical Discovery," iv, 58. 125. 

 Davis (Capt. John) viii. 385. 450. 

 Davis (John), " Worlde's Hydrographical Description," 



V. 488* 

 Davison (Francis) on Ps. cxxxvii., vi. 49. 137. 157. 247. 

 Davy (Dr.) Observations on Mr. Fox's Letter to Mr. 



Grey, viii. 652; xi. 294. 394. 434. 

 Davy Jones's locker, iii. 478. 509. 

 Davys (Sir John). See Davies. 

 Dawson (Rev. Wm.), ancestry, v. 396. 

 Day, the natural and artificial, viii. 198. 250.296. 371. 



541. 

 Day of the month, lines on, iv. 130. 

 Days, unlucky, vii. 232; viii. 305; xi. 203. 

 Day (David), founder of Fairlop fair, v. 472. 

 Day (John), Discovery of the Inquisition, viii. 1 37. 350. 

 D'Aye (Robert), Cromwell's descendant, ix. 88. 

 Dayrell (Wild), winnei- of the Derby, xi, 483; xii. 35. 

 Dayrolles family, i, 219, 373. 476. 

 Dayrolles (Solomon), master of the revels, i. 219. 373. 



476; confederate of Junius, xii. 299. 511. 

 " Days of my Youth," verses on, viii. 467. 



