128 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Sotadic verses, vi. 209. 352. 445; vii. 297; viii. 229. 



520. 

 Soud, in Sliakspeare, explained, v. 152. 

 Soufflot (Jean Germain), architect, v. 74. 

 Soul, its occasional transmigration, iii. 206. 

 Soul and the magnetic needle, simile of, vi. 127. 207. 



280. 368. 566 i vii. 508; viii. 87. 159. 280. 

 "Soul's EiTand," its authorship, iv. 274. 353; MS. of, 



vii. 175. 343. 

 Sonling, a custom in Shropshire, iv. 381. 506. 

 Soulis (Lord), tradition of his death, v. 112. 

 Sounds heard at great distances, ix. 561 ; x. 232. 

 South (Dr. Kobert), on the Apocalypse, v. 469. 

 extempore prayers, x. 145. 

 judge alluded to by him, v. 246. 

 Latin tract against Sherlock, vii. 402. 

 Sermons, vi. 25. 346. 488 ; ix. 515. 578 ; x. 55. 



324. 515. 

 verses upon Westminster-school, ix. 28. 

 South versus Goldsmith, Talleyrand, &c., vi. 575 ; vii. 



164.248.311. 509. 

 South Sea Company, xi. 157. 177. 

 South Sea playing cards, v. 217. 

 Southampton (Countess of), vii. 64. 

 Southampton brasses, iv. 132 ; canal, lines on, xii. 



324. 

 Southampton Fields, Bloomsbury, i. 217. 

 Southcott (Johanna), her Hymns, vi. 265. 

 Sontherfell, spectre horsemen at, vii. 304. 

 Southey (Robert) and Voltaire, x. 282. 425. 493; 



xi. 50. 

 Southey (Robert), criticism on St. Matthias's day in 

 leap-year, vii. 58. 115; " Doctor" quoted, i. 73. 316; 

 ineditod letter, vi. 286 ; March to Mexico, iii. 243 ; 

 Moravian hymns, v. 249 ; " Rule Britannia," xi. 324. 

 Southwark mint, vii. 303; pudding wonder, viii. 79. 

 Southwell (Robert), his Supplication to Queen Eliza- 

 beth, i. 351. 

 Southwell (Sir Richard), iv. 152; xii. 215. 

 Souvaroflrs despatch, viii. 490; ix. 20. 

 "Souvenli-s de la Marquise de Crequy," xii. 471. 498. 



.'i21. 

 Sovereigns, European, their genealogy, i. 92. 119. 250. 



282. 339. 

 Sovereigns dining in public, vi. 197; ix. 120. 

 Sovereigns of England. See Kings of England. 

 Sow, its symbolical meaning, viii. 493. 

 Spa Fields, or London Spa, ii. 404. 

 Spa Fields Chapel, formerly the Pantheon, ii. 404. 

 Spade, its present and original meaning, vii. 132. 

 Spain, English clergymen in, viii. 410. 574. 

 Spalatro (Archbishop of), iv. 257. 295; v. 80. 

 Spalding (Solomon), his Historical Romance and Mor- 



monism, v. 560. 

 Spanish armada, pictures of, vii. 454. 558. 

 Bibles, iv. 101. 

 bullfight, i. 381. 

 floet in 1588, v. 598. 

 literature, ii. 39. 

 physicians, costume, vii. 133. 

 play-bill, viii. 336. 

 Keformation , X. 446. 530; xi. 236. 

 treasure frigates captured in 1804, x. 144. 

 verses on the invasion of England, v. 294. 352. 



Spanish vessels wrecked in Ireland, v. 491. 598; vi. 44. 

 63. 182. 449. 

 yew bows, vi. 10. 44. 87. 

 Sparrows at Lindham, viii. 572. 



Sparse, its meaning, i. 215. 251 ; vi. 554; vii. 51. 246. 

 Speaker of the House of Commons in 1697, viii. 152. 

 Speareth, its meaning, vii. 401; viii. 44. 121. 

 Species in the vegetable kingdom, vi. 7. 112. 302. 378. 

 Spectacles, the inventor, v. 106; inscription on a pair, 



iv. 407 ; V. 39. 

 " Spectator." Vol. IX., y\. 381 ; Vol. X., June 13, 1716, 



.387; Dutch version, iii. 22 ; authorship of its poems, 



V. 439. 513. 548. 597. 

 Spectral coach and horses, v. 365. 

 Spectre horsemen at Southerfell, vii. 304. 

 " Speculum Christianorum," v. 558. 616. 

 " Speculum Exemplorum," its compiler, i. 380. 

 Speddyll, or Spettell, its meaning, xii. 246. 

 Speech, erroneous forms of, vii. 202. 329. 632; viii. 65. 

 " Speech given to man to conceal his thoughts," author 



of the maxim, i. 83 ; ii. 318; vi. 575; vii. 164. 248. 



487; viii. 136. 

 Speed (John), MS. authorities, xi. 139; " Stonehenge, 



a Pastoral," v. 395 ; xii. 246. 

 Speke family, ii. 479. 



Speke's Secret History of the Revolution, xii. 403. 

 Spellings, false, arising from sound, vi. 29. 228 ; ix. 



113. 

 Spells in Norfolk and Suffolk, vi. 601. 

 Spence (Joseph), " Essay on the Odyssey," revised by 



Pope, i. 363. 396. 

 Spence (W. S.), his factitious pedigrees, ix. 221. 271. 

 Spencer, a dress, origin of the name, xi. 254. 

 Spencer (Edw.), of Rendlesham, marriage, ix. 273. 

 " Spendthrift," a publication, viii. 102. 

 Spenser (Edmund), biographical notices, i. 482 ; iii. 510; 



iv. 74; X. 204; birth-place, vii. 303. 362. 410; 



" Fairy Queen," the missing books, viii. 367; notes 



on, iii. 369; iv. 133. 165; x. 143. 370; monument, 



i. 481 ; portraits,'iii. 301 ; iv. 101 : x. 205; Shepherd's 



Calendar, iv. 473; x. 204; Tasso and Spenser, xi. 



121.391. 

 :S,<pl^, its meaning, ix. 541 ; x. 116. 316. 473. 

 Sphinx, its signification, xii. 88. 134. 

 Spick and span-new, iii. 330. 480; v. 521, 

 Spider, cardinal, vii. 431. 

 " Spider and the Fly," poem, ii. 245. 

 Spidei-s, sea, xi. 11.1 74. 

 Spielberg prison, when built, ix. 302. 

 Spinckes (Nathaniel), descendants, v. 273. 380. 

 Spinning-machine of the ancients, ix. 515. 

 Spinoza, his burial-place, vi. 510. 614; vii. 192. 

 Spirit, its lingering before death, iii. 84. 

 Spirit-rapping. See Rapping. 

 Spiritual persons employed in lay offices, vi. 376. 56'; 



vii. ,50. 

 Spittal-hell tut, a sprite, iv. 212. 

 Spitting for luck, vi. 193. 

 Spon, its derivation, iv. 39. 412, 

 Sponge, when first known, iii. 390. 

 Sponsors, proxies for absent, ix. 324; x. 154. 

 Spontaneous combustion, vii. 286, 345, 391, 440, 458. 



632. 

 Sporting queries, xi. 407. n 



