FIRST SERIES. 



37 



Compositions during the Protectorate, iv. 406. 490; v. 



68. 546. 

 Compostella, pilgrimage to, i. 6. 24. 

 Compton (Bp. Henry), date of his death, vi. 223. 

 Compton (Lady), letter to her husband, ii. 424. 499. 

 Compton Park, picture of the withered hand, viii. 125. 

 Compton-street, Soho, i. 228. 



" Compatatio Eccles. Anglic," quoted by Burnet, v. 11. 

 Concert bill, an old one, v. 556 ; in Queen Anne's reign, 



xi. 381. 

 Concert of Nature, iii. 69. 

 Concolinel, ii. 217. 317. 378. 

 Condarius, explained, xii. 30. 

 Conde's Arabs in Spain, ii. 279. 

 Conditor Precum, vi. 362. 

 Conduit (Mr.) of the Mint, viii. 544. 

 Conduitt and Sir Isaac Newton, ix. 195. 

 Coney Gore, its meaning, xii. 126. 195. 354. 460. 

 Confession kept inviolate, ii. 296. 317. 

 Confessor to the royal household, x. 9. 

 . Confirmation of adults, viii. 440; ritual, xi. 342. 414. 



512; xii. 135; superstition, vi. 601; vii. 167. 

 Conflagration of the earth, ii. 89. 366. 

 Conge, its meaning, xii. 354. 460. 

 Conger, its etymology, viii. 444. 

 Congle at Maplestead, Essex, xii. 451. 

 Coningsby family, xii. 222. 295. 312. 414. 

 Coningsby (Sir Harry), vi. 406. 

 Conjunctions joining prepositions, viii. 514. 629; ix. 



21. 180. 279. 

 . Conjurer, its modem use, x. 243. 472. 

 Connecticut halfpenny, iv. 424; vi. 423. 

 Connection, its orthography, ii. 131. 

 Connellan (Thaddeus), his writings, x. 364. 

 Conner or Connah's quay, viii. 43. 

 Conners, its meaning, vii. 234. 321 ; viii. 43. 

 Connor (Barnard), xii. 207. 289. 

 Conqueror of the gentleman of the- long robe, x. 265. 

 Conquest, its original meaning, ii. 440. 484; iii. 30. 



92. 170. 

 Conquest (Dr.), Emendated Bible, iv. 103. 

 " Conquest of Ireland," Anglo-Norman poem, xii. 265. 

 Conrad of Salisbury, " Descriptio utriusque Britanniaj," 



i. 319. 

 Conscience, a case of the force of, iv. 38 ; v. 164. 

 Consecration of Churches, Bp. Cosin's form, i. 803; of 



military colours, x. 10. 75. 

 Consilium novem delectorum Cardinalium, viii. 54; ix. 



127. 252. 380. 518. 

 Consolato del Mare, ix. 271. 

 Consort (Mons.), noticed, vii. 381. 

 Constable of Masham, ix. 198. 

 Constable's entries at Great Staughton, x. 61. 

 Constables of France, vi. 128. 254; vii. 332. 

 Constantius II., his coins, ii. 42. 254; iv. 238. 327. 

 Constantine (M.), artist, i. 452. 

 Constantinople and the Crimea, x. 303 ; libraries, xi. 7 ; 



prophecies respecting, x. 29. 147. 192. 374; xi. 67. 



189. 

 Constantinople — Istamboi;l, viii. 148. 

 Constitution Hill, origin of name, i. 28. 

 " Constrae," and " translate," ii. 22. 77. 

 Consuetudinarium of St. Cross' Hospital, xi. 43. 

 Contango, its derivation, viii. 586. 



Contemporary ver. cotemporary, xii. 102. 415. 



Contents, its hackneyed use, viii. 120. 



Contracted names of places, iii. 182. 



Contractors, epigram on two, x. 61. 115. 



Conundrums, vi. 126. 602 ; vii. 294. 



Convention Parliament of 1 660, MS. diary of, i. 470. 



Converts from Church of Rome, Form for Receiving, iv. 



189. ^ 



Convicts, list of innocent, iii. 224. 

 Convocation a part of Parliament, v. 540 ; injunctions of 

 that of 1562, viii. 273; for York province, iv. 368. 

 425; in Ireland, vi. 317; vii. 345. 583; sitting at 

 Westminster, iv. 279; in the reign of George II., 

 viii. 465; Perpetual Curates not represented, ix. 351 ; 

 prolocutor in 1717, ii. 21; xi. 472; suffragan bishops 

 in, ix. 35. 

 Convocation, alliterative pasquinade on, vii. 129. 

 Convocation and the Act of Submission, vi. 456. 

 Convocation and the Propagation Society, viii. 100; ix. 



574. 

 Conway family, vii. 261. 

 Conway's Book of Praiers, xi. 48. 

 Conybeare and Howson's Life of St. Paul, error in, ii. 



63. 

 Conyngers, its etymology, vii. 182. 241. 368. 441. 

 Cook (Capt.), did he discover the Sandwich Islands ? 



viii. 6. 108; his family, ix. 423; x.^5. 

 Cook (David), Westminster watchman, i. 152. 

 Cook (Vincent), translation of a Greek MS., x. 127; 



xi. 134. 

 Cook-eels, or buns, i. 293. 412. 

 Cookworthy (William), viii. 585. 

 Cooper's Chronicle, viii. 494. 

 Cooper (John Gilbert) and the song " Winifreda," iii. 



108. 155. 

 Cooper (Samuel), his miniature of Cromwell, iv. 368 ; 

 V. 17. 67. 92. 189. 234. 255. 303. 403; painting of 

 William IIL, x. 147. 194; noticed, viii. 368. 

 Coorobee (Denis), his progeny, x. 422. 

 Coote family, xii. 185. 

 Cop, its meaning, v. 44 ; vi. 65. 

 Cope (Caleb) of Lancaster, U. S., x. 77. 

 Cope (Sir Antony), house at Hanwell, xi. 29. 

 Copes, when disused, xii. 103. 

 Copenhagen Society of Antiquaries, v. 262. 

 Copernicus, inscription on his tomb, ix. 447. 553. 

 Coptic language, ii. 376. 499; iii. 468. 

 Copying ink, its ingredients, xi. 47 ; xii. 480. 

 Copyright in privately printed books, xii. 495. 

 Copyright law, international, xii. 243; and the United 



States, x. 536. 

 Copyright law and British Museum, viii. 468. 

 Coquilles, or buns, i. 293. 412. 

 Coral charms, vi. 11. 185. 



Corbario (Peter de) and Petrus Corbariensis, xi. 464, 

 Corbet, a Scottish family, ix. 515. 

 Corbet peerage, vii. 283. 

 Corbet (Miles), regicide, xi. 423. 

 Corbisdale, battle of, vi. 550. 

 Corbridge parochial library, x. 213. 

 Cordeaux family arms, iv. 407. 

 Corderii Colloquia, xi. 242. 

 Corderoy (Skilful Sergeant), xi. 11. 

 Corfe Castle, its blockade in 1644, i. 401. 

 £ 



