38 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Cornhill tun, ii. 100, 101. 



Corinna in Chaucer, i. 303. 



"Corlnna — Diyden, Pope, and Curll's, xii. 277. 392. 



431. 

 Cork, or Carke, provincialism, x. 128. 

 Corn, Indian, xi. 204. 

 Cornarium explained, xi. 504. 

 Comeille's Pompey the Great, translated, v. "129. 

 C^ellys (Mrs.), her house in Soho Square, i. 244. 



450. 

 Cornewalleis the widow, xii. 64. 



Comish arms and motto, iv. 174; folk lore, xi. 397. 

 457. 497; xii. 37. 297; language, MSS. of, ii. 311; 

 miners' superstitions, vi. 601; viii. 7. 215. 618; 

 monumental brasses, xi. 220; provincialisms: see 

 Polperro. 

 Comish (Thomas), suffragan bishop, i. 165. 

 Cornu family arms, xi. 87. 213. 

 Cornwall and Phoenicia, formerly connected, v. 507. 

 Cornwall dukedom, xi. 240. 

 Cornwall family monuments, x. 282. 

 Cornwalls of London, ix. 304. 576. 

 Cornwall (Barry), his poem " The Magdalen," ii. 451; 



passage in the " Return of the Admiral," xii. 303. 

 Cornwallis (Earl of) kin to George III., vi. 198. 

 Coronation, a flower, vii. 530. 

 Coronation custoii, ix. 453; x. 13. 116. 

 Coronation stone, ix, 123. 328. 

 Coronations, bishops' costume at, x. 87. 227; xi. 152. 

 Coronet in Newbold Church, ii. 297. 

 Coronets, ducal, x. 47. 

 Coroners' inquests, ix. 483; x. 105. 

 Corporation enactments, ix. 300. 528. 553. 

 " Corporations have no souls," &c., viii. 587 ; ix. 284. 



431. 

 Corpse, a limp, x. 88. 156. 253. 

 Corpse, curious occurrence of a, viii. 6. 205. 

 Corpse, handbell carried before, ii. 478; iii. 68. 154. 



310. 466. 

 Corpse passing makes a right of way, iii. 477. 507. 



519; iv. 124. 240; xi. 194. 254. 294. 

 Corpses, conspiring to dig up, x. 9. 

 Corpulence a crime, ix. 196. 

 Correspondents furnishing real names, vi. 558 ; viii. 5. 



94. 181. 

 Corrigia, its meaning, iii. 435. 

 Corrupted words, iv. 313. 436. 

 Corvizer explained, vii. 503. 

 Coryate's Crudities quoted, viii. 558. 

 Cosas de Espaila, ii. 39. 

 Cosin (Bp. John) and Dr. Fuller, vi. 124; calendar of 



1552, xi. 26; conference with Robinson, ii. 295; 



foiTu of consecration, i. 303 ; " History of Transub- 



stantiation." v. 551; manuscripts, i. 303. 433; ii. 



40. 

 Cosmopolis, i. 213. 251. 307. 

 Cossack, its meaning, vii. 430. 

 Costume, clerical, i. 22. 189. 



Costmne and manners, x. 23. 81. 178; ia 17th cen- 

 tury, iii. 88. 155; Turkish fashion, iv. 150. 

 Cotlion, an artificial port, xi. 207. 290. 

 Cotterell (Sir Charles), his death, viii. 664; ix. 19. 



208. 

 Oottiugbam'a Museum of Mediaeval Art, iii, 46. 



Cottle's " Life of Coleridge," reviewed in " The Times," 



i. 55. 75. 

 Cotton family of Finchley, ii. 134; family tombs in 

 Landwade Church, iii. 39. 187. 



Cottons of Fowey, viii. 317. 



Cotton (Charles), poet, x. 346; xi. 409; portrait by 

 Lely, ii. 476. 



Cotton (Pien-e), his relatives, vi. 485. 



Cotton (Sir John Hynde), vi. 388. 567. 



Cottoner (Raphael), Maltese Grand Master, ix. 264. 



Cou-bache explained, v. 79. 131. 212. 402. 



Couched, to couch, its early use, v. 298. 405. 



Coulanges and Prior, coincidence between, iii. 446. 



Count, its etymology, x. 1 63. 



Countermarks on Roman coin, ii. 327. 



Counties, English, hexameter poem on, v. 227. 305. 



County histories, lists of, xi. 187. 234. 



County Histories Societies, their formation, vii. 14. 



County boundaries, antiquity of, v. 197; rhymes, viii. 

 615. 



Court dress, iii. 407. 457. 



Court of Policies, xi. 224. 329. 



Court of Wards, i. 173. 455. 



Courtenay (Sir Philip), genealogy, ii. 135. 206. 



Courtney family, ix. 450 ; xii. 480. 



Courtois (Susannah), artist, xi. 301. 



Cousin-German explained, x. 187. 



Cousin (Gilbert) of Nozeroy, vi. 12. 



Cousin (V.) on French literature, x. 246 ; " Lectures on 

 Kant," 360. 



Cousins, their marriage, viii. 387. 525; x. 102. 



Cousinship, mode of computing, v. 342. 



Covent Garden Theatre, ii. 289. 



Coventry, sending one to, vi. 318. 589. 



Coventry (Francis), the History of Pompey the Little, 

 vi. 433. 472; vii. 191. 



Coventry (Sir William), i. 381. 



Coverdale (Bp. Myles), Bible, iii. 54. 122 ; its frontis- 

 piece, X. 444; original title, v. 59. 109. 153; birth- 

 place, i. 120; biographers, 379; exhumation, vi. 552. 

 615; vii. 97; notices of his last days, xii. 443. 



Coverley (Sir Roger de), i. 368; name of a dance, i, 

 59. 118; V. 467; vi. 37. 



Covert family, vii. 85. 189. 



Covey, its etymology, iii. 477. 509. 



Covines, iii. 477. 509; iv. 208; v. 189. 



Cow, or cough, vi. 62. 



Cowdray family, vi. 75. 160. 256. 349. 



Cowel (Dr. John), his Interpreter burnt, ix. 226, 227. 



Cowgill family, xi. 301. 



Cowley (Abraham) and Thomas Gray, iv. 204. 252 

 262.465; vi. 119; monument, v. 267; Poem on 

 Drinking answered, iii. 55; Poems, blank supplied, 

 xii. 6. 52. 67; Prose Works, v. 339; Shakespeare's 

 Plays interpolated, xi. 48. 89. 



Cowley, Cowleas, or Coverley, i. 59. 107. 



Cowper, how pronounced, iv. 24. 76. 93. 137; v. 451; 

 vi. 16. 177; vii. 102; viii. 603. 



Cowper (Chancellor), xi. 326. 



Cowper (William) and Pope, viii. 383; complimentary 

 verses [?] xi. 289. 392; divine chit-chat, iii. 388 ; 

 Letters, ix. 247. 402; "Task" quoted, i. 222; 

 tobacco smoking, vii. 229. 



Cowperiana, ix. 421. 



