32 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Chaucer, Geoffrey (continued). "■ 



pilgrimage to Canterbury, iii. 315. 515. 



portrait by Occleve, ii. 442. 485. 



pronunciation of his name, iv. 255. 



prophetical view of tlie Crystal Palace, iii. 361 ; 

 vii. 356. 440. 



star, Min al AuwS, iii. 419. 



Temple student, vi. 603 ; vii. 69. 



tomb, its restoration, i. 463; iii. 188. 



Trophee, in the Menkes Tale, i. 303. 339. 



" Win of Ape," explained, xii. 1 23. 



Works, modern editions, i. 30; mutilated, xi. 83. 

 Chaucer and Mr. Emerson, vii. 356; x. 135. 

 Chauncy, or Chancy, ix. 126. 286. 

 Chauntry of the Irish Exchequer, xi. 147. 468. 

 Cheese given at a birth, v. 364. 

 Cheke (Sir John), v. 200. 260; his clock, 320. 

 Cheltenham theatre, address at, xi. 223. 

 Chelwoldesbury, derivation, v. 346. 449. 

 Chemistry, its derivation, viii. 470. 

 Chepstow, the town, variously named, v. 300. 

 Chepstow Castle, its betrayal, iii. 241. 

 Chepstow (Richard, Earl of), l)is pedigree, v. 126. 204. 



261. 300. 

 Chequers, inn sign, x. 32. 

 Cherries, origin of, x. 101. 

 Cherubim and Seraphim, iii. 27. 

 Chertsey Abbey, encaustic tiles from, xii. 469. 

 Cheshire, cat, ii. 377. 412; v. 402; minstrel court, 



X. 244 ; proverbs, vi. 385 ; tokens, xi. 282. 

 Cheshire round, a dance, i. 383. 456. 

 Chesnut, horse, why so called, xii. 407. 

 Chess, its etymology, vii. 65. 114; antiquity, vi. 464; 

 ix. 224; Bishop, xi. 126. 152; enigmatical verses in 

 a MS., xi. 165; Indian problem, vi. 464; vii. 193; 

 the Queen, viii. 469. 

 Chess, and the classical game " latrunculi," xii. 425. 

 Chesshyre (Sir John), of Hallwood, ix. 186. 

 Chessmen found in Isle of Lewis, vii. 620. 

 Chest, Hand, i. 1 73. 

 Chester inquisition, x. 184 ; West Chester, why so 



called, iii. 353. 459, 460. 

 Chester (Sir William), viii. 365. 



Chester (Thomas), bishop of Elphin, viii. 340 ; x. 1 1 5. 

 Chesterfield (Earl of). See Wotton. 

 Chesterfield (Lord), lines on Queen Caroline, iv. 444 ; 



and Junius, xii. 511. 

 Chetham family, xi. 182. 

 Chetham library, Manchester, iv. 333. 

 Chettle (Hen.), biography, iii. 54 ; " Hoffman," v. 228. 

 Chevalier, its origin, x. 243. 

 Chevalier St. George, v. 610. See Stuart (James 



Francis Edward). 

 Chevreuse (Duchess de), swimming across the Thames, 



vi. 316. 

 Chicheley (Abp.), date of his death, viii. 198. 350. 

 Chichester diocesan arms, x. 186. 

 Chichester Pallant, vii. 206. 269. 335. 

 Chickens, machine for hatching, ii. 84. 

 Chilcot (WiUiam), iii. 38. 73. 212. 

 Child with a double tongue, ii. 101. 439. 

 Child (Francis) of Berkshire, ix. 477. 

 Child (F. C), his American reprints, i. 209. 

 Child-mother, vii. 526. 



Children, ten at a birth, ii. 459 ; iii. 64. 347. 



Children crying at their birth, ix. 343. 



Children named after their mother, iv. 442. 506. 



Children nurtured by wolves, x. 62. 



Children of Israel, number of the exodus, v. 11. 180. 



Children's Petition, its author, iii. 117. 



Chillingworth (Wm.) on a mistake in the Prayer-Book, 



iv. 435. 

 Chimney money, ii. 120. 174. 269. 344. 379 ; ii. 120. " 

 Chimney-piece motto at Newcastle, v. 345. 451. 

 China, various styles of old, v. 415. 

 China, proposed conquest by Lord Clive, xi. 9. 

 China-houses, xii. 472. 

 Chinese language, works on, x. 29. 167. 

 Chinese lanterns, viii. 63. 



Chinese proverbs in Crystal Palace, x. 46. 175. 294. 

 Chinese revolution and masonry, xi. 280; xii. 232. 

 Chintz gowns, ix. 397. 

 " Chip in porridge," explained, viii. 208. 

 Chipchase of Chipchase, vii. 133. 

 Chippenham corporation, their annual feasts, ii. 516. 

 Chipperfield and Co. (Tom), iv. 251. 

 Chiselhurst church, Kent, custom at, x. 243. 

 Chisels, stone, ix. 321. 

 Chits, a nickname, x. 44. 

 Chittim, as translated in the Vulgate, xi. 111. 155. 



215. 

 Chloe, who was Chloe ? iii. 449. 507. 

 " Choice of Hercules," its author, viii. 89. 

 " Choirochorographia," viii. 151.229. 

 " Choise of Change," Rowland's claim to the authorship, 



i. 38; ii. 419. 

 Choke damp in coal-pits, x. 104. 

 Cholera and the electrometer, v. 319. 

 " Chopping the tree," at Oxford, ix. 468. 

 Christ, print of the head of, iii. 168. 228; vi. 414. 496. 



521 ; paintings of, ix. 270. 550. 

 Christ Church, Dublin, ancient usage, xi. 147. 468. 

 Christ-Crosse Row, iii. 330. 465; viii. 18; ix. 162. 231. 



457. 

 Christ Hospital, Christmas carol, xii. 493; custom on 



Nov. 17th, iv. 344; library, viii. 298. 395; old songs, 



i. 318. 421. 

 Christencat, its meaning, i. 109. 

 Christian doctrine, fraternity of, i. 213. 281. 

 Christian names doubled, ix. 45. 232.359; x. 18. 133. 



276. 413; xi. 175. 233. 433; xii. 394. 481. 

 Christian names, their early use, vii. 406. 488. 626; 



viii. 63. 351. 

 "Christian Year," motto, viii. 335; passage in, viii. 



539. 

 Christian (Richard), lines on the Decalogue, v. 607. 

 " Christie's Will," or Cryistiswoll, xi. 78. 

 " Christina of Pisa," 1489, by Caxton, i. 44. 

 Christina of Sweden, her annotated books, i. 51. 

 Christmas carols, ii. 513; ix. 325; at Christ's Hospital, 



xii. 493. 

 Christmas day, its origin, iii. 167. 249; lines on its 



falling on a Sunday, ix. 197; on a Thursday, vi. 385. 

 Christmas eve custom, iv. 309. 

 Christmas folk lore, x. 501. 

 Christmas hymn, i. 201. 252. 

 Christmas in Cheshire, xii. 491; in Pennsylvania, viii. 



615. 



