12 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Battledoor explained, x. 385. 432 ; xi. 38. 391. 



Battles, description of, wanted, ix. 246. 



Battles of Enjrland, their suiTivors, xi. 319. 481. 



Battenianne (William), vii. 126. 



Bave (Anthony), his manuscripts, viii. 469. 



Bavenno, inscription on the church, vi. 359. 469. 



Bavin, a provincialism, x. 120. 256. 



Bawn, its me.ining, i. 440 ; ii. 27. 60. 94 ; iii. 483. 



Baxter (Richard) and St. Augustine, vii. 327 ; on ap- 

 paritions, ix. 12. 62 ; descendants, ii. 89. 206 ; 

 "Heavy Shove," v. 416. 515. .594; vi. 17.38 ; in- 

 scription on his pulpit, ix. 31 ; pulpit, v. 363. 498; 

 " Saints' Rest," vi. 18. 86. 135. 159.205; Works, 

 iii. 370 ; noticed, v. 481. 507. 565. 



Baxter (Wm.), the philologist, i. 285. 



Bay leaves at funerals, ii. 196. 



Bayard's Leap, tradition of, vi. 600. 



Bayes' troops, explained, vi. 56. 



Bayeux tapestrj', xi. 245. 



Bayley (Bishop), portrait, iii. 8. 



Bayley (Miss), translation of her " Ghost," x. 446. 



Baylie (Dr. Richard), Laud's chaplain, iii. 225. 



Baynard's Watering, Paddington, i. 162. 



Bayne (Ralph), Bishop of Litchfield and Coventry, vi. 

 203. 



Baynes (John) of Embsay, xii. 3. 



Bayning (Elizabeth), Countess of Sheppv, her death, v. 

 537 ; xii. 86. 



Bayswater and its origin, i. 162. 



B.C.L. degree, its privileges, vi. 534 ; vii. 38. 167. 222. 



B. C. Y. characters, ix. 149. 



Beacon Hill proverb, xi. 223. 



Beadingfield (Edward), poem by ? vi. 50. 



Beads for counting prayers, vii. 360. 



Bean feasts, x. l63; xi. 16. 



Bean swads, a cure for warts, vi. 312. 519. 



" Bear, the louse, and religion," a fable, i. 321. 



Bear and ragged staff badge, x. 68. 



Bear's Bible, inscription on the, iii. 329. 



Bear's liver, xii. 495. 



Beard, (Rev. Mr.), Vicar of Greenwich, iii. 140. 



" Beaten to a mummy," origin of the phrase, Tii. 206. 



Beaton (Cardinal), his portrait, ii. 434. 497 



Beatrix de Bradney, her marriage, iii. 208. 



Beatrix (Lady Talbot), ii. 478. 



Beattie (Dr.), on the English Liturgy, ix. 466. 



Beauchamp tower, London, viii. 509. 



Beauclerk (Lady Diana), v. 234. 261. 



Beaufort family, iv. 343. 491. 



Beaufort (Cardinal), his birth, xii. 274. 369. 



Beaufort (Louis de), his Dissertation, x. 101. 331. 392. 



Beaufoy (S.), " The Ringers' Tnie Guide," i. 157. 



Beaumarchais (P. A. Caron de), sixain by, vii. 174. 



Beaumont (Co!.), conservatory at Bretton Hall, vi. 348. 



Beaumont (Francis), poem attributed to him, i. 146; 

 and Jeremy Taylor, ii. 154 ; iv. 154. 



Beaumont and Fletcher's Plays, i. 134 ; annotated by 

 Dr. Hoadly, 386. 



" Beauty and Booty," vi. 456. 



" Beauty of Buttermere," viii. 126. 



Beauvoir pedigree, ix. 349. 596. 



Beaver (Peter), noticed, viii. 501. 



Beaver hat, when first used, i. 100 235. 266. 307, 317, 

 338. 386. 417 



Beccles, its parochial library, viii. 62. 

 Beck (Anthony), bishop of Durham, i. 173. 

 Becket (Andrew), his Works, ii. 266. 316. 

 Becket (Mary), abbess of Barking, x. 486. 

 Becket (Thomas k), his family, x. 486 ; grace-cup, i. 

 142; mother, i. 415. 490; ii. 78. 106. 270. 364. 

 469 ; X. 486 ; sister Mary, abbess of Barking, x. 486. 

 Beckett pedigree, xii. 31. 146. 233. 

 Beckford (Alderman), ii. 262. 

 Beckford (Wm.) and the author of Junius, x. 228. 328. 



349 ; literary remains, x. 344. 

 Beckington (Bishop), his will, x. 245. 

 Bed, lines on a, i v. 175. 

 Bed turned after childbirth, vi. 432. 

 Bedale in Yorkshire, bell at, ix. 593. 

 Beddington Hall, Queen Elizabeth's gift to, vii. 454. 

 Bedell (Bishop), his device, v. 101. j. 



Bede's dying words, x. 139. 229. 329. 494; xi. 132. 

 373; xii. 106. 292; chair in Jarrow church, v. 

 434 ; " Ecclesiastical History," MS. of, iii. 180. 247 ; 

 Mental Almanac, iv. 201. 341. 436 ; Works and 

 epitaph, vi. 342. 472. 

 Bedford Coifee-house, Covent Garden, i. 451. 

 Bedford Missal, v. 238. 

 Bee, the wandering, ix. 370. 

 Beechen roundles at Castle Dairy, xi. 159. 213. 

 Beech-Martin described, ix. 65. 

 Beech-trees struck with lightning, vi. 129. 231 ; vii. 



25; X. 513. 

 Beefeaters' dress, iii. 406 ; origin of name, vi. 176. 256. 

 Beer, an ancient drink, vi. 72. 233. 375 ; xi. 154. 315. 

 Bees and the Sphynx atropos, vii. 499. 633. 

 Bees, adjurations to, x. 3211 

 bartering for, ix. 446. 



golden, in heraldry, vii. 478. 535 ; viii. 30. ' 

 legends respecting, ix. 167 ; x. 498. 

 names for their migrations, viii. 440. 575. 

 New Zealand, xii. 452. 

 noise when swarming, v. 498 ; vi. 288. 

 noticed by Pliny, vi. 31. 

 sting fatal to them.selves, xi. 384. 489. 

 superstitions. See Folk Lore. 

 Bee-hives in Germany and France, xi. 303. 

 Bee Park, v. 322. 498 ; viii. 199. 

 Beeston (Sir Wm.), his journal, i. 400. 444. 

 Beetle, a hammer, ix. 329. 

 Beetle mythology, i. 194. 

 Beetling, a cliff, its derivation, xii. 346. 

 Bega (C), painting by, ii. 494 ; iii. 28. 

 Beggar's Opera, its receipts, i. 178. 

 Beggar's Petition, its authorship, iii. 209. 

 Beghards, a begging sect, v. 374. 

 Beheaded man, body discovered of one, vi. 386. 488. 



558. 

 Behmen (Jacob). See Bohme. t» 



Behn (Mrs.), her dramatic writii%s, xi. 184. 

 Beholden, its derivation, v. 321. 

 Beke (Col. Richard), his general pardon, v. 544. 

 Belatucadrus, his statue, vii. 205. 319. 

 Belcher, an handkerchief, origin of the word, ii. 45. 

 Belfry towers detached, vii. 333. 416. 465. 512. 586; 



viii. 63. 185. 376 ; ix. 20. 

 Belgic version of the Gospels, xii. 1 12. 

 Belgium, its ecclesiastical antiquities, vii. 65 ; ix, 386; 



