FIRST SERIES. 



33 



Christmas jingle, xii. 506. 



Christmas pastimes, xii. .507. 



Christmas thoni, iii. 367. 



Christmas tree, viii. 619. 



Christopher (St.) and the Doree, v. 536. 



Christopher (St.), representations of, v. 295. 334. 372. 



418. 494.549; vi. 62. 349. 

 ChristO])her (St.), governor of, in 1662, v. 510; vi. 87. 



108. 131. 364.419. 

 Christophilus (Lord Richard), ii. 120. 204. 

 Chronicle, an old English MS., xi. 103. 139. 256. 

 Chronicles in MS. at Reigate, i. 6. 

 Chronicles of the Kings of Israel, viii. 561. 

 Chronograms, v. 225. 585; vi. 97. 329. 385. 575; viii. 



42. 280. 351. 562; ix. 11. 60. 

 Chronological Institute, v. 104. 142. 144. 344, 

 Chrysopolis, or Parma, i. 383. 

 Chrysostom, to smooth the hand in, ii. 188. 

 Church, its derivation, v. 79. 136. 165. 255; earliest 



designation as a building, xii. 302. 

 " Church and Queen" toast, x. 146. 

 Church building and restoration, x. 140. 

 Church chests, representations on, iii. 187. 

 Church History Society, suggested by Dr. Maitland, ii. 



371. 464. 480. 

 Church livings, incumbents prior to 1680, i. 61. 91. 

 Church of England, its catholicity, xi. 411. 

 Church porch, right of refuge in, ix. 325. 597; x. 255. 

 Church rates, ii. 182. 

 Church-scot, or Ciric-sceat, ii. 136. 

 Church stile, its meaning, vi. 339. 378. 568. 

 Church temporalities before Constantine, viii. 412. 

 Church unity, anonymous MS. on, x. 65. 

 Church usages, ancient, ix. 127. 257. 566; x. 72; xi. 



61. 

 Church Down in Gloucestershire, xii. 341. 387. 500. 

 Churches, inscriptions in, vi. 510; vii. 25; interments 



in, ix. 278; services in ruined, iv. 231. 261. 355. 

 Churches decked with evergreens, iii. 118; iv. 109; vi. 



487. 

 Churches erected in each county, x. 126. 193. 316. 

 Churches in City of London, plea for, ix. 51. 

 Churches in Domesday Book, ix. 355. 

 Churches in France, their architecture, x. 484; xii. 18. 



154. 

 Churches of England and Rome, which committed 



schismP viii. 485. 631 ; ix. 98. 

 Churchill (Charies), poet, v. 74. 142; vi. 484. 591; 

 grave, ix. 123. 234. 334; x. 378; paraphrase on 

 Ps. cxxxvii. iv. 82. 

 Churchill property, xi. 65. 



Churching of women, v. 293; in Hampshire, ix. 446. 

 Churchmen, high and low, viii. 117; x. 260. 278. 

 Churchwardens' accounts at Saxilby, xii. 162. 

 Churchwardens, their office, vii. 359 ; viii. 584. 

 " Churchyard," a Russian poem, iii. 372. 460. 

 Churchyards, burying on the north sides, ii. 55. 92. 

 126. 189. 253. 346; iii. 74. 125. 332, 333; iv.309; 

 vi. 112; viii. 207. 

 Churchyard customs, i. 441 ; desecration, vi. 245 ; lite- 

 rature, X. 402. 

 Chute lambs, i. 93. 474. 



Cibber (Golley), " Apology," characters of actors in, i. 

 29. 67; " Lives of the Poets," v. 25. 65. 116. 161; 



vii. 113. 143. 341. 386; " Supplement to his Lives 

 of Actors, by Tony Aston, i. 105. 

 Cibber (Theophilus), share of the London Daily Post, 



xii. 217. 

 Cicada, or Tettigonia Septemdicim, iv. 423; vi. 255. 

 Cicero quoted, viii. 640; ix. 111. 

 " Cid," a poem, viii. 367. 574. 

 Cilgerran Castle, its records, v. 537. 

 Cimmerii, Cimbri, iv. 444; v. 188. 308. 

 Cinderella, or the glass-slipper, ii. 214. 297. 

 Cipher advertisements, xii. 42. 112. 305. 413. 

 Circle, supposed discovery of the quadrature, xii. 57. 



114. 306. 

 Circulation of the blood, its discovery, i. 202. 250. 

 Cirencester, Remains of Roman Art in, ii. 79. 

 Ciric-sceat, or Church-scot, ii. 136. 

 Ciss, cissle, &c. ix. 148. 334. 

 Citron, its early cultivation, xi. 41. 

 Ciudad Rodrigo, its siege, x. 126. 

 Civilation, its etymology, vi. 199. 376. 564. 

 Civil war garrisons, iii. 143. 

 Civil wars, Walpole's anecdote of, i. 93. 

 Clabber Napper's Hole, vi. 455. 

 •* Clair (Sir John St.), xi. 227. 



ClaiiToyance noticed by St. Augustine, ix. 511; tested, 



X. 7. 194. 

 Clamor, to curb, restrain, vii. 567. 

 Clancie (Major), his life and death, ii. 375; iii. 42. 

 Clapper-gate, its meaning, v. 560; vi. 542. 

 Clap-trap, its derivation, xii. 347. 

 Clare, in Norfolk, the Honor of, iii. 390. 

 Clare customs, x. 385; legends, viii. 145. 264. 360. 

 436. 616; ix. 73. 145. 490; s. 159. 251. 390. 505; 

 xi. 180. 455; xii. 333. 

 Clare family. See Be Clares. 

 Clare Market, i. 196. 

 Clare (the two Gilberts de). Earls of Gloucester, v. 439. 



594. 

 Clare, Earls of Pembroke, v. 205. 261. 371. 451. 476. 

 Clare (John), bis woiks, vi. 196. 

 Clare (St.), church dedicated to her, iii. 182. 

 Clarence dukedom, viii. 565; ix. 45. 85. 224; x. 73. 



255. 

 Clarendon (Edw. Hyde, 1st earl of), vii. 211 ; ix. 45. 

 Clarendon's History of the Irish Rebellion, ii. 357; 

 X. 224 ; judgment on the Tradescantian Museum, 

 v. 385; lines by, x. 163; opinions of, i. 165; riding- 

 school at Oxford, x. 185; xi. 32; satirical verses on 

 his downfall, v. 28; and the tub-woman: see Mrs. 

 Hyde. 

 Claret, its derivation, vii. 237. 511. 561. 630. 

 Clark (Alex.), vii. 580; viu. 18. 517. 

 Clarke (Caleb), descendant of Milton, viii. 339. 

 Clarke (Dr. Adam), MS. from his library, x. 423. 

 Clarke (Dr. E. D.), charts of the Black Sea, ix. 132. 



456.' 

 Clarke's Essay on Mathematical Learning, vii. 15. 

 Clarke (Dr. Samuel) and Sir Isaac Newton, xii. 362. 

 Clarke (Mrs. IMary Anne), iv. 396. 493. 

 Clarke (Rev. Samuel), portrait, iii. 209. 284. 

 Clarkson, historian of Richmond, his MS., iii. 373. 



507. 

 Clarkson (Thomas), monument, xi. 47. 

 Classic authors and the Jews, ix. 221. 384. 478; x. 12. 



