INDEX. 



539 



Pembroke, Countess of, her epitaph, 262. 



307. 413. 456. 

 Penn ( VVm.) and his family, 2G4. 409. 454. 

 Penny post and Coleridge, 27. 



origin of, 6. 62. 



Pepys'6 song, " Beauty retire," 105. 

 Peter the Hermit, inscription on his tomb, 



329. 

 '■ Peter Wilkins," on the authorship of, 13. 

 Peter's (St.) in Rome, supposed inscription 



on, 42o. 

 Peters, Hugh, notices of, 166. 214. 

 Petworth register-book, 449. 485. 510. 

 Pews in churches, 56. 

 Peyton, family of, 186. 

 P. (G.) on Machell's MS. collections, 227. 

 ^■^ on Prideaux and the post-cffice, 186, 



on illustrations of Tennyson, 319. 



P. (H.) on Babington's conspiracy, 458. 

 * (n.) on " turning the tables,*' 276. 

 Phillipps (Sir Thomas), his manuscripts, 



358. 507. 



on record of existing monuments, 417. 



^iXoXoyoi, on Bacon and Fagan, 483. 

 Phoenix, the, its literary proprietors, 323. . 

 4>^;, on illustrations of Chaucer, 306. 

 Pictorial antiquities, 423. 

 Pigeons eaten before death, 517. 

 Fightle, its meaning, 391. 

 Pigs with single hoofs, 263. 337. 468. 

 Pilcher, its meaning, 476. 507. 525. 

 Pilgrims' road to Canterbury, 429. 

 Pillgarlick, 42. 74 150. 

 Pinkerton ( W.) on Davy Jones's locker,S09. 

 —— on Mazer wood, 239. 



■ on the Tradescants, 393. 



on whale caught at Greenwich, 286. 



Pio(A. P. di) on the etymology of apricot, 



75. 

 P. (J.) on the miscellaneous tracts of Peter 



Sterry, 38. 

 P. (J. S.) on porci solidipedes, 263. 

 Plafery, its meaning, 88. 

 Planch^ (J. R ) on Poem on the Grave, 4G0. 



on Red Sindon, 27. 



Plays in churches, 494. 



Poetical coincidences, 320. 



Poet's Corner, when attached to the 



transept of Westminster Abbey, 381. 

 Pomeroy (Arthur), his parentage, 303. 

 Pontoppidan's Natural History of Norway, 



326. 52a 

 Pope, on the election of one in a water- 

 closet, 142. 253. 

 Pope's Dunciad, an incongruity in, 387. 



lines by, 221. 



Person's imposition, 28. 



Porter (Endymion), his birth-place, 303. 



Portraits of d.stinguished Englishman, 233. 



Portus Canum, where? 408. 



Pose, the etymology of " to pose," 91. 



P. (P.) on folk lore in Laiicasliire, 516. 



— ^ on places called Purgatory, 241. 308. 



P. (R.) on the doctrine of probabilism, 61. 



P. (R. C.) on Saxon coinage at Derby, 225. 



Predeceased used as a verb active, 143. 287. 



Price (E. B.) on engraved warming-pans, 



115. 



on private memoirs of Queen Eliza- 

 beth, 197. 



Prideaux (Edmund) and the first post- 

 office, 186. 26S, 267. 308. 



family, 398. 



Prior's Posthumous Works, 24. 



ProBa ConScicntia on the family name of 

 Bacon, 41. 



Probalillism, the doctrine of, 61. 68. 



Prohibited degrees, table of, commindcd to 

 be fixed in churches, 329. 



Prol in Anglia, where? 238. 



Proverb?, Kx pede Hcrculem, 302. 380. 



the cart before the horse, 4C8. 



— — going the whole hog, '2'2i. 2.%. 



Mind your P'» and 0'», 32«. 357. 463. 



523. 



—— spick and span new, 3K). 480. 



under the rose, 300. 480. 



Prymc (C. de la) on Mind your P's and 

 g'«, 357. 



P. (S.) on Farquharson and Dr. PauU, 28. 

 on ** Many a word at random spoke," 



409. 

 Ptolemy's presents lo the Seventy-two, 449. 

 Publicans' signs, 424. 

 Pultock (Robert) the supposed author of 



Peter Wilkins, 13. 

 Purgatory, places so called, 241. 

 Pursuits of Literature, its authorship, 240. 



276. 378. 

 Pursuivant on Lord Bexley's descent from 



Cromwell, 185. 

 P. (W. H.) on God's acre, 284. 

 ^— on the couplet," Lavora, come se tu," 



&c., 188. 



Q. 



Q. on Schmidt's Antiqnltates Ncoma- 



gensis, 328. 

 — ^ on a quotation from T illotson, 241. 

 Q. (D.) on the meaning of slums, 284. 

 Q. (F. S.) on cockade, 196. 



on derivation of aver, 292. 



— — on pillgarlick, 74. 



on true blue, 92. 



Q. (P.) on Civil War tract, 303. 



Q (Q.) on a quotation from Cam. Emblem., 



433. 



on skeletons at Egyptian banquets, 



482. 



Q. (U.) on Bartolus' Learned Man De- 

 fended, 224. 



on a quotation from The Christian 



Instructed, 240. 



Quakers' attempt to convert the Pops, 302. 



335. 396. 

 Quarles, was he pensioned ? 11. 

 Quebe<;a and his epitaph. 223. 458. 

 Quidam on Gillinghara, 448. 

 Quinces a customary present, 20. 

 Quincuplex Psalterium, 86. 

 Quotations: "I preached as a dying man 



to dying men," 36. 

 " And coxcombs vanquish Berkeley 



by a grin," 110. 



" After me the deluge," 299. 



" A fullow feeling makes one wondrous 



kind," 300. 



" Earth has no rage," 45. 



*' A verse may find him," &'C., 60. 



'* The lucky have whole days," 69. 



" Clarum et venerabile nomen," 69. 



'* Plurima gemma latet cxca. tellure 



sepulta,' ' 76. 



" Cuin grano sails," 66. l.'iS 253. 



" The soul's dark cottage," 10.5. 1.54. 



" Fine by degrees and beautifully 



less," 105. 1.54. 

 "Sun, stand thou still upon Gideon ! " 



137. 191. 

 — — " Sees good in everything," &c., ISS. 

 — ^ *' La Rose nait en un moment," 186. 



" Laus tua non tua fraus," 2^0. 466. 



" Lavora, come se tu," &c., 188. 226. 



. " Impatient to speak and not see," 213. 



" Just notions will inco good actions 



grow," 240. 

 "O wearisome condition of humanity," 



241. 



" Marriage is such a nibble rout," 263. 



'." Poor Allinda's gtoiving old," 264. 



" Deal, Dover, and Harwich," 264. 



" The feast of reason," \x., 26>. 



" In the sweat of thy brow," 275. 



" There was a. maid of Westmore- 

 land," 278. 



" Too wise to err," 279. 



" Quadrijugis iiivectus equis," 287- 



" Harrv Parry, when will you marry ?" 



207. 289. 



- " To-day we purpose," &c., 302. 396. 

 _- " Go.1 takes those soonest whom He 



loves best " 302. 377. 

 " So geographers on Afric's downs," 



372. 485. 

 — — " N.iturc's mother wit," ."588. 

 " Felix, quem faciunt," 373. 431 . 482. 



Quotations : " NuUi fraus tuta latebris," 



323. 433. 

 " 'i'he right divine of kings to govern 



wrong," 494. 

 " In time the bull is brought to bear 



the yoke," 388. 502. 



" Men may live fools," &c.. 518. 



" Suum cuique tribuere," 518. 



. ** We hope, and hope, and hope," 448. 



" William the Norman conquers 



England's state," 168. 

 " Words are men's daughters," 38. 



no. 154. 



R. on epitaph on Countess of Pembroke, 



413. 



on Smith's collections of MSS., 285. 



R. (a reader) on expressions in Milton, 241. 

 R. 2 (C.J.) on Aristophanes on the mo- 

 dern stage, 105. 

 R. (A.) on a pun by Milton, 141. 

 R. ( A. jun.) on the picture of the Saviour, 



228. 

 R. (A. B.) on epitaph of the " worthie 



knight," 57. 

 Rab Surdam, 42. 193. 

 Rack, its meaning in Shakspearc, 213. 

 Rag Sunday in Sussex, 425. 

 RaUibow, odour from the, 224. 310. 

 Raines (F. R.) on record of existing monu- 

 ments, 514. 

 R. (A. L.) on Dr. Maitland's Illustrations 



of Mesmerism, 220. 

 Raleigh, Sir Walter, an incident respecting, 



10,5. 

 Ramasshed, meaning of the term, 347. 434. 

 Ratcatcher on the word ferret, 461. 

 Ratche, its meanuig, 265. 

 Rawson (J.) on the mother church of the 



Saxons, 90. 

 R. (C. C.) on the Tradescants, 469. 

 R. (C. I.) on Criston, Somerset, 357. 



on the frozen horn, 459. 



on " Quadrijugis invectus equis," 287. 



on the white rose, 505. 



Rds. (E.) on the Brownes of Cowdrny, 194. 



R"ader on monumental symbolism, 449. 



Rechibus, its meaning, 302. 



Red book of the Irish Exchequer, 6. 



Red hand, 194. 



Red Sindon, 27. 



Redwing's nest, 408. 486. 



Registration of Dissenters in churches, 



370, 460. 486. 524. 

 R. (E, J,) on touching for the evil, 290. 

 Relic, story of a, 2J4, 

 Relton (F, B,) on the family of Lord of 



Relton, 2(K 

 on Capt. Howe's relation to Geo. II., 



353. 

 on natural daughter of James II., 224. 



506. 



on the symbolism of the fir-cone, 290. 



Relton (Lord of), p,-.rticulars wanted, 208. 

 Resurrection, tra(;es of it b. c, 274. 

 Revert on " Nettle in, dock out," 463. 

 R. (F.) on the etymology of Balsall, 373. 

 R. (F, R,) on Sir Andrew Chadwick, 247. 



on the family of Entwysels, 61. 



on earlycultureof the imagination, 73. 



on hiring servants in Holderness, &c., 



328. 



on " Jurat ? crcde minus," 143. 



R, (G,) on Gloucester alarm, 278. 



, on the locality of Criston, 278, 



R, (G, T.) on aiiachronismsof painters, 517. 

 R. (G. II.) on William Tell legend, 137. 

 R. ( H. C.) on the foundation-stone of St. 



Mark's, Venice, 88. 

 Rich (A,, jun ) on the episcopal mitre and 



papal tiara, 144. 

 Richardson (Joseph), notice of, 276. 334. 

 Richard III,, the day of his accession, 351. 



457, 



tr.iditional notice of. 206. 221. 300. 



Rifles, the best, English or American? 517. 



