540 



INDEX. 



Rimbault (E. T.) on Sir George Buc's 

 Treatise on the Stage, 187. 



— on the bellman and his songs, 451. 

 on the Breeches, or Geneva Bible, 



165. 



— Sir John Davies and his biographers, 

 82. 



on Dancing Trenchmore, 437. 



— on the Dutch church in Norwich, 396. 

 on Prior's Posthumous Works, L'4. 



. • on traiiitional English ballads, 49. 



on the birth-place of Robert Burton, 



106. 



on T. Gilbert on Clandestine Mar- 

 riages, 463. 



on a portrait of Ben Jonson, 106. 



— — on old Hewson the cobbler, 123. 



on Joan Sanderson, or the cushion- 

 dance, 125. 



on Machell's MS. collections, IIS. 



on Macklin's ordinary and school of 



criticism, 163. 



— .— on the etymology of mushroom, 166. 



was Hugh Peters on the stage? 163. 



on St. Thomas of Trunnions, 1S7. 



on *' Talk not of love," a song. 197. 



—— on the academies of Kynaston and 

 Gerbier, 317. 



^— on the family of the Tradescants, 353. 



on Sir Francis Windebank's eldest 



son, 373, 



on the authors of Leicester's Com- 

 monwealth, .S74. 



on Moore's Almanack, 3S1. 



. on Holywood the mathematician, 389. 



— on Witte van Haemstede, 396. 



on the author of Image of both 



Churches, 407. 

 on Kemble pipe of tobacco, 425. 



— on Peter Sterry, 434. 



Rizzio (David), his signature wanted, 390. 

 R. (J.) on Leicester's Commonwealth, 29. 



on mildew in books, 29. 



on the autograph of Titus Gates, 27. 



R. (J. C. ) on Christopher Flecamore, 23. 



— on Erasmus and Farel, 3S 



on Travels of Baron Munchausen, 305. 



on the origin of Lynch law, 24. 



on the situation of Portus Canum, 408. 



on Rodolph Gualter, 8. 



on swobbers, 426. 



R. (J R.) on inscription in Limerick cathe- 

 dral, 477. 



R. (J. Y.) on Oxford friar's voyage, 168. 



R. (L. M. M.) on Arthur's Seat and Salis- 

 bury Craigs. 119. 



on bab at the howster, 282. 



on the ep-scopal mitre, 146. 



on the etymology of covey, 477. 



on a work " Speculative Difficulties in 



Religion," 477. 



on Lammer. beads, 84. 



on an old Scotch tale, 265. 



R. (M. C.) on midwives licensed, 44. 



on abbot's house at Buckden, 45. 



R. (N. E.) on earth thrown upon the coffin, 

 497. 



on Christmas-day, 249. 



on form of prayer for king's evil, 42. 



126. 3.'i2. 



on the Lincoln missal, 192. 



on Rodolph Gualter, 123. 



Robertii Spha^ria used as a medicine, 467. 



Robert-on of Muirtown, 40. 77. 



Robertson (J. C.) on Petworth register, 

 485. 



Rock (Dr.) on Abbot Eustacius, 381. 



on the meaning of " eisell," 397. 



on Vox popuU vox Dei, 3S1. 



Rogers (Thomas) of Horninger, 62, 



Rolliad, authors of tne, 129. 131. 276. 333, 

 334. 



Roman Catholic bishops in Ireland since 

 James II., 167 



church, list of its sees, 168.409. 437 



peers, 253. 



Roman medicine stamps, 328. 



roads near London, 328. 



Rooms closed after death, 142. 248. 



Roper (Margaret), her tenderness to the 

 remains of Sir T. More, 10. 



Roper (William J. D.) on Private Memoirs 

 of Queen Elizabeth, 45. 



Rose, on the white, 407. 505. 



Rose, under the, the phrase elucidated, 213. 



Rotation of the earth, 371. 



Round robbin, its derivation, 353. 461. 



Rovert on the German universities, 303. 



on publicans' signs, 424. 



Rowe family, 408. 470. 



Rowley, old, 28. 



Royal Courtly Garland, an old ballad, 1. 



R. (S. P. O.) on a list of comets, 223. 



on knights hospitallers, 243. 



Rub-a-dub, its meaning, 387. 



Rudbeck's Atlantica, 26. 196. 



Campi Elysii, 167. 



Ruggles' Ignoramus, Comoedia, 518. 



Rupert, Prince, notices of, 221. 



R. (W ) on the word auriga, 483. 



R. (W. B.) on old English actors and 

 musicians in Germany, 21. 



R. (W.J. D. )on preserving existing monu- 

 ments, 514. 



S. 



S., on the authorship of the Beggar's Peti- 

 tion, 209. 



on the Norman nobility, 503. 



2., on going the whole hog, 224. 



on innocent convicts, 224. 



S. (A.) on quotation, "So geographers on 

 .^trie's downs," 372. 



Sabbatical and jubilee years of the Jews, 

 373. 464. 



Sacramental wine, administered to weak 

 children, 179 320. .368. 



Salgado's slaughter-house, 284. 



Sallustius, was he a lecturer ? 32.5. 465. 



his connexion with Tacitus, 325. 



Epistles to Caesar, 62. 140. 



Salopian, on Jews in China, 442. 



Sancroft (Abp.) corrected Dillingham's 

 poems, 323. 



Sanctorum .Septem Dormientium Historia, 

 its author? 139. 



Sanderson (Joan) and the cushion-dance, 

 125. 286. 



Sangaree, its meaning. 141. 



San grail, explained, 224. 281, -282.413. 482. 



San Marino, the republic of, 321. 376. 



Sansom (J.) on Drachmarus, 105. 194. 



on Durham sword that killed the dra- 

 gon, 425. 



on the custom of shaking hands, 118. 



on Defender of the Faith, 157. 



on metrical psahns, 198. 



on the presentation of gloves, 220. 



on notices of Prince Rupert, 221. 



Sapphics, English, 494. 525. 



Sathaniel, when noticed '? 303. 



Sauenap, meaning of, 157. 



.Saviour, engraving of the, 168. 228. 



Saviours(St.) Church, Canterbury, 12. 90. 



S. (B.S.) on Quakers' attempt to convert 

 the Pope, 302. 



Scaligers of Verona, 133. 193. 



Scandinavia, notes and queries on, 370. 



Schmidt's Antiquitates Neomagcnses, 328. 



School of the Heart, its author, 3!iO. 469. 



S. (C. N.lon theory ofthe earth's form, 508. 



Scott's (Sir Walter) Lay of the Last Min- 

 strel, 364. £67. 46V. 505. 



— ^ quotation from Lord of the Isles, 409. 



"Marmion, on a passage in, 20 J. 



Scotus on Lady Alice Carmichael, 60. 



Scoute-Generall, its author? 303. 



Scriblerus, emendation of a passage in Vir- 

 gil, 237. 



Scrutator, on lines on woman, 143. 



S. (E.) on the origin of the word Venville, 

 152. 



Seats in churches, 56. 



Secundus (Johannes), extract from, 135. 



Sedley's Poems, on a passage in, 476. 



Seguard, or Seward (John), his poems, 261. 



S. (E. J.) on topical memory, 508. 



on meaning of Carfoix, 508. 



Seleucus on Prince of Wales' motto, 168. 



on the redwing's nest, 486. 



• on *' similia similibus curantur," 405. 



Selwyn (E, J.) on porci solidipedes, 357. 



468. 

 Sempecta at Croyland, 328. 357. 433. 

 Serins, where situated ? 494. 

 Sermons, on preaching from written, 478. 



526. 

 Servants, their mode of being hired in 



Holderness, 328. 

 Sewell, meaning of, 391. 482. 505. 

 Severambes, Histoire des, 4. 72. 147, 148. 



374. 

 Sexes, their separation in church, 94. 288. 

 S. (F.) on the occasional transmigration of 



the soul, 206. 



. . on moths called souls, 220. 



S. (G. A.) on Ferrar and Benlowes, 237. 



on " Fronte capillata," S.C., 43. 



Shaftesbury (Earl of), his letter to LeClerc 



respecting Locke, 97. 

 — — first earl of, jiarticulars wanted, 186. 

 Shaking hands, origin of the custom, 118. 

 Shakspeare family, 493. 



a thorough sailor, 300. 



his small Latin, 497. 



All's Well that Ends Well, on two 



passages in, 177. 



■^^ .■Antony and Cleopatra, 139. 190. 



■ his meaning of*' captious," t>5. 153.229. 



430. 474. 497. 

 Cymbeline, on a passage in, 290. 



his meaning of " eisell," 66. 119. 210. 



225.397. 474. .508. 524. 



and Fletcher, 318. 



Hamlet, on a passage in, 10. 



Henry Vlll., authorship of, 33. 



Love's Labour's Lost (Act II. Sc. 1.), 



163. 230. 



Much Ado about Nothing, on a pas- 

 sage in, 388. 



his meaning of " prenzie," 401. 454. 499. 



522. 



— — his meaning of ribaudred nag,273.464. 



Romeo and Juliet (Act HI. Sc. l.),476. 



his meaning of strained, 185. 269. 



Tempest, on the word rack, 218. 



" Most busy when least I do 



it," 229. 251. 



I'roilns and Cressida, on a passage in, 



62. 



Venus and Adonis, 260. 



Winter's Tale, an old ballad on, 1. 



. Payne Collier's note on 



the, 101. 

 Shapp. or Hepp, abbey of, 7. 

 Sheldon's -Minstrelsy ofthe English Border, 



49. 

 Sheep, cure of disease by means of, 320. 367. 

 Shewri-while, a mountain spirit, 20. 

 Shovel (Sir Cloudesley), 23. 45. 

 Sicilian vespers, 484. 

 Sides and angles, 265. 

 Similia similibus curantur, 405. 

 Simnel (Lambert), his real name, 390. 506. 

 Sing, on the Devil's Bit, 477. 

 Singer (S. W. ) on two passages in All's 



Well that Ends Well, 177. 



on canes lesos, 212. 



on the meaning of ** eisell," 120. 



on poems by C. Huyghens, 423. 



on '• Felix, quern faciunt," &c., 482. 



on charming of snails, 132. 



on "The soul's dark cottage," 154. 



on the maxim, *' Lavora come se tu," 



&c., 226. 

 .— ^ on Shakspeare's meaning of" ribaudred 



nag," 273. 



on Latin drinking-song by Braith- 



waile, 297. 



on the family ofthe Tradescants, 391. 



on Latin version of Robin Goodfellow, 



402. 



on the word prenzie in Shaksi)eare, 



456. 



on a passage in Romeo and Juliet, 476. 



