26 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Brydone the tourist, vi. 108. 163; ix. 138. 255. 305, 



432.496; x. 131.268.426. 

 Buc (Sir George), Master of the Kevels, ii. 38. 73; 



Treatise on the Stage, iii. 187. 

 Buceaneei-s, i. 400 ; iii. 380. 

 Buchan's Collection of Ballads, iii. 51; xii. 21. 95. 



135. 

 Buchanan (George) and Theodore Zuinger, vi. 71; and 



Voltaire, V. 2 72; epigrams, i. 358. 374; ii. 152. 372; 



his distich, iii. 466. 

 Buck (John), Maltese kiiight, x. 177. 

 Buckden, the abbot's house at, ii. 446. 494 ; iii. 45. 

 Buckhorse, origin of the word, ii. 45. 

 Buck-hounds, master of the, iv. 422. 

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



249. 280. 438. 

 Buckingham (Henry, Duke of), motto, i. 138. 252. 



283. 459. 

 Buckinghamshire monumental brasses, xi. 220. 

 Buckle, to bend, its etymon, vii. 375; viii. 127. 304. 



526; ix. 576. 

 Buckles for shoes, x. 23. 

 Buckridge Street, St. Giles, i. 229. 

 Bucks, ancient society of, vii. 286. 

 Budget, its origin, vi. 604; vii. 73. 

 Budhists, their oath, viii. 503. 

 Buff, origin of the term, xi. 467» 

 Bug, its derivation, i. 237. 

 Building sites mysteriously changed, v. 436. 524; vi. 



50. 71. 

 Bull, a blunder, its origin, ii. 243. 441; v. 453. 497; 



English and Irish, xii. 180. 

 Bull and bear baiting, x. 23. 

 Bull, oblation of a white, viii. 1; xii. 152. 

 " Bull the barrel," its meaning, v. 200. 281. 

 Bull (Bishop), said the baptismal service by heart, vii. 94. 

 Bull (John), origin of name, i. 336. 372. 

 Bulkeley (Sir Richard), ix. 353. 

 Bullaces explained, viii. 167. 223. 326. 

 Bullen family, v. 127. 569. 

 Bullen's drinking-horn, iii. 38. 

 Bullfights, Spanish, i. 381. 

 Bullinger's Sermons, vii. 407. 

 Bull's blood as a poison, xi. 12. 67. 148. 305. 

 Bulls called William, i. 440. 

 Bulls, forged Papal, iii. 149 ; iv. 189. 

 Bulstrode Park, camp in, i. 470. 

 Bulstrode (Whitelocke), viii. 293. 454. 

 Bulstrode (Wm.), monument of his wife, vi. 394. 445. 

 Bumbailiff, or poussc-cul, ii. 276. 

 Bummaree, its meaning, iv. 39. 74. 93. 

 Buncle (John). See Amory (Thomas). 

 Bunn's Old England and New England, ix. 451. 

 Bunny (Edmund), " Book of Christian Exercises," x. 68^ 



110. 

 Buns of Good Friday, origin, L 244. 

 Bunting (Edward), his Irish Melodies, iii. 167;. iv. 452; 

 Buntings of Norfolk, xii. 509. 



Bunyan (John), his descendants, ix. 223; xii. 491 ; did 

 he know Hobbes ? ii. 518; " Emblems," vii. 470; 

 viii. 18; manuscripts, ix. 104. 129; "Pilgrim's 

 Progress," early editions, viii 222; portraits, ii. 476; 



iii. 89; " To lie at the catch," vL 56; vii. 132; x. 

 135; "VisionsofHell,"iii. 70. 89.289.467; i¥..l3ft. 



Burbage (Richard), epitaph, xi. 428. 



Burdelyers, x. 182. 292. 



Buren (Mr. Van), burlesque on, vi. 576. 



Burghley, the Lord of, a play, iv. 12. 



Burgo (Thomas de) " OiEcia Propria Sanctoram 



Hiberniae," x. 487. 

 Burials and funerals, a.d. 1600-1659, vi. 269. 

 Burial by torch-light, xi. 27. 174. 

 Burial custom at Maple-Durham, xi. 283. 336. 413, 



432. 

 Burial in church walls, ii. 513; iii. 37. 156; chancels, 



xi. 409. 473. 

 Burial in erect posture, viii. 5. 59. 233. 455. 630; ix. 



88. 279. 407. 

 Burial in unconsecrated ground, v. 320. 404. 549. 596; 

 vi. 17. 84. 134. 136. 229. 448; viii. 43. 202. 329. 

 423. 527; x. 233. 394. 

 Burial in woollen, v. 414. 542; vi. 58. Ill ; x. 20. 182. 

 Burial of living persons, vi. 245. 560; x. 233. 

 Burial of monies, vi. 152. 230. 

 Burial of unclaimed corpse, vii. 262. 340. 435. 

 Burial on the north side of churches. See Churchyard. 

 Burial service said by heart, vii. 13. 94. 320; passages, 

 " ashes to ashes," H. 22. 62 ; " In the midst of life," 

 &c., ii. 327. 413. 500; viii. 78. 177; tradition, ix. 

 451. 550. 

 Burial superstition, vi. 193. 

 Burial towards the west, ii. 408. 452. 

 Burial without coffins, xii. 380. 

 Burial without service, v. 466. 613; vi. 108. 

 Burian's (St.) church, Cornwall, v. 2. 

 Burke (Edmund) and the Annual Register, iii. 441; 

 xii. 62. 92. 171. 



domestic letters, ix. 9. 207. 



epigram against, iii. 243. 284. 



impressions on viewing Westminster Abbey, ii. 359. 



379. 

 Junius called " the mighty boar of the forest," iii. 



493; iv. 391; viii. 136. 

 MS. letter sold, iii. 199. 

 marriage, vii. 382; vii. 134. 158; xi. 185. 

 political maxim, i. 93. 104. 

 portraits, iv. 271. 332. 

 quotation from Silius Italicus, xii. 367. 

 " Reflections," passage noticed, vi. 556; vii. 51. 

 supposed writer of Sir Joshua Reynolds's Lectures, 

 xii. 325. 393. 472. 

 Burke (Walter), vi. 576; vii. 193. 

 Burl, burling, a provincialism, iii. 204. 

 Burleigh (Lord) and the dissenters, viii. 487. • 

 Burleigh (the Lord of), xii. 280. 355. 

 Bum, how to cure one, iv. 500. 

 Burnam (Peter), his private life, x. 363. 430. 

 Burnet (Bishop), his character as an historian, i. 40'. 

 120. 181. 250. 341. 493; ii. 98. 372; iii. 136; vii. 

 59; ix. 175. 448; correspondent of Hutchinson, v. 

 396; epigram on, v. 58. 137; " History of his Own 

 Time," iii. 87; original MS. of, xii. 380; " Pastoral 

 Letter' 'burnt, viii. 625. 

 Burnet (Bp.), H. Wharton, and Smith, viii. 167. 

 Burnet (Thomas), MS. notes in his Telluris Theoria 



Sacra, i. 227. 

 Burnett Treatises awarded, i. 91 ; xi. 75. 

 Burney (Dr.), his musical wcMrks, i. 135. 



