INDEX. 



557 



Pocahontas, an Indian princess, 267. 316. 



Pocket-handkerchief, its etymology, 481. 



Pocklington (Baron), his portrait, 526. 



Poetical squib, 1758, 90. 



Poetry, Ancient Devotional, its authorship, 411. 



Poets, coincidences among, 45. 97. 



Poets true prophets, 409. 470. 



Poitou, earls and town of, 311. 



Pole (Cardinal), work by, 328. 



Polish nuns, persecutions of, 187. 253. 276. 317. 505. 



Polygenesis of mankind, 304. 



Pomicon (S.) on borough of Trill, 458. 



Seal found at Old Ford, 468. 

 Pompeian English, 455. 534. 

 Pondicherry, description of its siege, 451. 

 Pontack's, a French ordinary, 375. 

 Popham (Sir John), letter to, 344. 375. 



Popiana : — 



Ayre's Memoirs to Alex. Pope, 373. 



Dennis's letter to Pope, 412. 



Key to the Dunciad, 14. 



Moore (Arthur), and the Moores, 13. 



Pope and Quarles, parallel passages, 409. 



Pope's visits to Bath, 373. 



Smythe (James Moore), 13. 



Porcelain, antique, 38 ; Oriental, 480 ; Sfevres, 397. 

 Portrait, anonymous, 110. 197. 

 Posterity, the natural desire for, 302. 

 Post-man and tub-man of the Exchequer, 168. 200. 

 Pouncy (John), his discovery of carbon printing, 136, 

 P. (P.) on ghost of Wynyard, 194. 

 Heraldry and etymology, 179. 

 Precedency and colonial laws, 109. 

 Predecease, an objectionable word, 178. 

 " Prees," in Chaucer, 371. 

 Presb. Roffeus on private baptism, 159. 

 Presbyter M. on works on surnames, 37.3. 

 Presbyterian communion tokens, 506. 

 Presentation to a living in 1 683, 29. ' 



Prichard (Dr. J. C.) on ethnology, 306. 

 Prick in the garter, or belt, a game, 202. 

 Prior (Matthew), note by, 375. 

 Prior of England of the Order of St. John, 372. 

 Privy Seal record of Scotland, 342. 

 Proclamations of the Irish Government, 1673 — 1716, 



319. 

 " Promenade," a political print, 372. 

 Prophecy fulfilled through fear, 100. 

 " Proposal," a painting, 422. 

 Proverbial expressions in Puritan writers, 321. 



Proverbs and Phrases ; — 

 Dance the hays, 90. 119. 

 Every pea hath its vease, 397. 423. 

 Hocus pocus, 117. 179. 217. 259. 280. 3.38. 

 Lareovers for meddlers, 481. 

 Lying by the wall, 325. 440. 

 Mungret : " As wise as the women of Mungret," 



208. 253. 

 Pin my faith upon his sleeve, 130. 

 Reading: Showing the way to Reading, 233. 

 Roast : To rule the roast, 338. 489. 

 Sit ye merry, 372. 



Song : It is not worth an old song, 148. 213. 279. 

 Style is tlie man himself, 308. 



Proverbs and Phrases : — 



" 'Tis all over, like the fair of Athy," 458. 

 Twinkling of a bed-post, 347. 

 Vox et prueterea nihil, 99. 



Proverbs, anonymous, 287. 



Proverbs, picked-up ones, 343. 



Pryce (George) on casting out devils, 253. 



Wasbrough ver. Watt, 29. 

 P. (S.) on St. Paul's clock striking thirteen, 490. 

 Psalms of David, their involuntary metre, 122. 

 P. (S. R.) on the health of London, 325. 



Last of the pigtails, 344. 

 P. (T. H.) on memorial of battle, 343. 



Superstition in Bute, 522. 

 nu7 on casting out devils, 298. 

 Pulpit gowns worn by Seceders, poem on, 527. 

 Purim, the modern, or burning in effigy, 473. 

 Puritan writers, old words and phrases from, 321. 

 P. (W.) on the meaning of hkeiamme, 412. 

 P. (W. S.) on " Thoughts on the Human Soul," 526. 

 Py. (J.) on pig-iron, 412. 



Standard silverr, 419. 



Q. 



Q. on "Essays on the Formation of Character," 397. 



John Colhnges, D. D., 398. 

 Q. (Q. Q. Q.) on a Bible of 1551, 413. 

 Q. (R. S.) on jest and song books, 272. 



Complutensian Polyglott Bible, 298. 



Flowers noticed by early poets, 317. 



Salutation and cat, 278. 

 Quare (Mr.), inventor of the repeater watch, 13. 175. 

 Quarles (Francis), and " The Loyal Convert," 201. 299. 



330. 440. 

 Quarrel, its legal meaning, 473. 

 Queensberry (Earl and Marquis), their deaths, 265. 

 Querist on Margate grotto, 527. 

 Quietism, 226. 



Quotations : — 



Ac veluti nielicM voces, &c. 527. 



For he that fights and runs away, 161. 218. 420. 



For learned nonsense has a deeper sound, 497. 



Fortia facta monet curarum, &c., 326. 



Fronte capillata post est occasio calva, 290. 



I ask not sympathy, I have no need, 497. 



Journey of life, 498. 



Mors ligonibus sceptra sequat, 326. 



Neptune—" It is thine, Neptune ! " 396. 



Omne ignotum pro magnifico, 311. 381. 



Pleasure lies in its pursuit, 69. 



Prayer moves the Hand that moves the universe, 



132. 

 The maiden's majesty, at art's command, 69. 

 The solitary monk who shook the world, .348. 

 The world grew lighter as the monster fled, 132. 

 There'll be wigs on tlie green, 132. 

 Time doth transfix the flourish .set on youth, 132. 



B. 



R. on Franklin's Arctic expedition, 1G5. 

 Presentation to a living in 1683, 29. 



