138 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Vauxhall Gardens, ii. 212. 



Vavasours of Hazlewood, ii. 326; iii. 71. 



Vavassori, '' De Ludicra Dictione," x. 347. 



V. D. M., " Verbi Dei Minister," iv. 369. 



Vedast (St.), noticed, xi. 344. 



Vegetable kingdom, species in, vi. 7. 112. 302. 378. 



Vegetable resurrections, vi. 415. 518. 



Vegetable sympathy, iii. 407. 



Vegetating insects, iii. 166. 398. 436. 



Veiwe bowes, what? vi. 10. 64. 



Vellum, restored singed, x. 106. 133. 



Vellum-bound books explained, vi. 158. 



Vellum-cleaning, viii. 340; ix. 17. 



Venda, origin of the word, vii. 179. 270. 



Vendace, a fish, iii. 301; v. 302. 



Vendee, ballad of the rising of the, iv. 473. 



Vends, or Wends, is. 434. 



Venice, Sanuto's Doges of, i. 35. 75. 220 ; St. Mark's, 



its foundation-stone, iii. 88. 147 ; treasury, v. 583. 

 Venice glasses, vi. 76. 133. 233. 279. 

 Venison, proclamation respecting its sale, i. 5. 

 Venius (Otho), work on Emblems, viii. 88. 

 Venner (T.), " Via Eecta ad Vitam Longam," xi. 184. 

 Ventilation, an encyclopaedia of, ix. 415. 524. 

 Ventriloquism, ii. 88. 127. 234. 479. 

 Ventriloquist hoax, ii. 101; iii. 406. 

 Venville, its meaning, iii. 38. 152. 310. 355. 

 Verb and nominative case, xii. 65. 153. 210. 443. 464. 

 Vere (Arthur de), noticed, ix. 35. 

 Verelst the painter, ix. 148. 

 Vermin, payment for destroying, iv. 208. 389. 447; 



V. 67. 

 Vermuyden (Sir Cornelius), portrait, iv. 21. 

 Verney note deciphered, vii. 568 ; viii. 1 7. 

 Vernon (Adm. Edw.), alias "Old Grog," i. 52. 168; 



lines on, vi. 461. 590. 

 Vernon (Lady), maid of honour, viii. 462. 

 Vernon (Sir Kalph), his longevity, v. 389. 471. 

 Vernon (Thomas), his MSS., i. 427. 

 Verona, inscription at, vii. 24. 

 Veronica, its derivation, ix. 537; plant and saint, vi. 



199. 252. 304. 

 Veronica (Sancta), or face of Our Saviour, iii. 228; vi. 



414. 496. 521. 

 Verses, satirical, on the French Revolution, ix. 538. 

 Verses found in the Exchequer Office, Dublin, xi. 65. 

 Verses in classical prose, iv. 382. 455 ; v. 44. 

 Versicle and response, i. 440. 

 Version, its meaning, ii. 522. 

 Verstegan (Richard), Poems, iii. 85; portrait, 426; 



" Restitution of Decayed Intelligence," 85. 426. 

 Versus cancrinus, x. 204. 



"Vert Vert," illustrations of Cresset's, i. 366. 375. 

 Vertue (George), manuscripts, i. 319. 372. 

 " Vertuous Woman," poem from Harleian MSS., iii. 219. 

 Vesek, Russian measure, xii. 285. 

 " Vesica piscis," when first used, xii. 29. 93. 174. 

 Vessel of paper, its meaning, ix. 401. 

 Vessels of observation, xi. 62. 

 " Veus du Hairon," a romance, vii. 40. 

 Vicars-Apostolic in England, vi. 125. 297. 400; vii. 



242. 308. 390. 

 Victoria (Queen), descent from John of Gaunt, vi. 432. 



519; vii. 41 ; her five-pound piece, xii. 428. 



Vida, accent and caesura in a verse of, iii. 494; iv. 174; 



"Chess," translated, viii. 469; " Christiad," i. 67. 



384; ii. 317; quoted, iii. 494. 

 Vignau (Du), " Le Secretaire Turc," xi. 227. 

 Vigors (Mr. and Mrs.), noticed, xi. 426. i 



Vigors (Rev. Urban), viii. 340. 477. 

 Vigures (Balthazar), noticed, xi. 423. 

 Vikingr Skotar, meaning of the term, v. 394. 499. 

 Village: an old world village, x. 501. 

 Villains, the last of these bondmen, i. 139; iii. 327. 



410; x. 39; their manumission, vi. 268. 

 Villebrord (St.), miracle by, x. 241. 

 Villegas (Alonso de), Flos Sanctorum, viii. 604. 

 Villenage, its extinction, i. 139; iii. 327. 410; x. 39. 

 Villerius (Loselerius), vii. 454. 534. 

 Villers en Couche', battle, viii. 8. 127. 205. 370; ix. 



208. 

 Villiers (George), Duke of Buckingham, satirical song 



on, ii. 291 ; accused of killing a sailor, iii. 263; scan- 

 dalous letter written to him, ix. 56. 

 Vincent family, vii. 501. 586. 629. 

 Vincent (Thomas), of Trinity College, xi. 147. 

 Vincent's (St.) day, weather rules, ix. 307. 

 Vinci (Leonardo da), his Coenaculum, vii. 524. 624. 

 Vine at Hampton Court, xii. 404. 

 Vinegar plant, vii. 454. 



Viner (Sir Robert) and statue of Charles IL, iv. 40. 124. 

 Vineyards, places so named in England, ii. 392. 414. 



446. 552; iii. 341. 470. 483. 

 " Viola Sanctorum," its compiler, ii. 440. 

 Violin, best work on the, iv. 257. 

 Violins, Cremona, vii. 36. 501. 582. 

 Virgil, an early German edition, iv. 57; " Ji]neid," notes 



on lib. ii. 682-3, v. 388 ; lib. viii. 96, iv. 24. 88. 



260; James Henry's notes, iv. 307. 420; " Eclogue" 



viii. 44, quoted by Dr. Johnson, viii. 270. 400. 523. 



576; " Georgic," Ub. i. 513, iii. 237. 357; lib. i. 55, 



v. 58. 189. 307; lib. iv. 87, iv. 244. 

 Virgilian lots explained, vi. 77. 183. 

 Virgin and Child, stained glass picture of, xi. 466; xii. 



133. 

 Virgin Mary, black images of, iii. 63. 

 Virginal, musical instrument, xii. 9. 

 Virginal music, niode of reading, vii. 214. 

 Virginia, called Old Dominion, ix. 468; x. 114.235; 



xi. 246; its discovery and colonisation, iv. 190. 241. 



448; its old motto, x. 235; longevity at, x. 149. 

 Virginian's papers in " Public Advertiser," xii. 509. * 

 Viridis Vallis monastery, i. 213. 285. 

 Virtue depicted, xi. 63. 269. 

 Virtuosi, or St. Luke's Club, v. 487. 

 Vision, the paradox of, xi. 402. 

 Visit, its duration, xi. 121. 193. 251. 375. 

 Visitations, on early, iv. 8. 29. 

 Visiting cards, origin, iy. 133. 195. 243. 

 Vitalis (Janus), his Works, x. 523; xi. 131. 

 Vitrified forts, iii. 495; iv. 93. 

 Vitus (St.), noticed, iii. 241. 

 Vivan (Machell), his longevity, v. 356. 

 Vivares (Francis), engravings after Claude, ii. 72. 

 Viz., why used for videlicet, i. 120. 

 Voce populi halfpenny, iv. 66. 138. 

 Vogelweide (Walter), noticed by Longfellow, iv. 346. 

 Volcanoes and gold mines in Scotland, viii. 285. 



