TENTH SEKIES.
189
Newland (Sir Abraham) and Newlands, Chalfont
St. Peter, iv. 148, 213, 276, 457 Newlyn colony of artists and J. H. Martin, x. 246 Newman (Cardinal), in Boylesve's ' L'Enfant a la Balustrade,' iii. 147 ; parallel with ' Lead, Kindly Light,' v. 185 ; on Gibbon, 387, 435, 455 ; his birthplace, vii. 489 ; viii. 10 Newman (C. A.) on " Down, little flutterer," i. 87.
" P.P., Clerk of the Parish," i. 88 Newman (F.) on cheese for ladies, xi. 334. Cowper, xii. 432. ' Bcclesia Militans ' : Michael Hilt- prand, xi. 370. Fig trees: maturing meat, xii.
138. ' Four regular orders of monks," xii.
274. Petre epigram, xii. 411 Newman (H. E.) on Newman Street, viii. 310 Newman (J.) on Newman portraits, vii. 409.
Russell (Thomas) : Richard Stanley, vi. 70 Newman (Robert), engraver, b. 1768, xii. 9, 55 Newman (Rev. Thomas), c. 1721-5, iii. 28 Newman family portraits, vii. 409 Newman Street, off Oxford Street, the name, viii.
310 Newport, Essex, demolition of Lepers' Hospital at,
viii. 27 Newport (Capt. Chris.), temp. Queen Elizabeth,
iii. 467
Newport Church, I.W., engravings of, ix. 389, 457 Newry, co. Down, and the Earl of Shipbrook, v.
308
News, bad, and its bearers, ix. 351 Newsholme (A.) on coffins and shrouds, viii. 90 Newspaper, earliest use of the word, i. 486 Newspaper, early, in Jamaica, i. 169 ; first daily
ocean, i. 504 ; ii. 96, 157 ; first American, 1690,
ix. 347
Newspaper editions, iii. 287; viii. 117 Newspaper leading articles, their three paragraphs,
iv. 128
Newspaper press, Scottish, 1600-1700, censor- ship of, v. 388
- Newspaper Press Directory,' its diamond jubilee,
iii. 241, 261
Newspaper reports of cricket, viii. 75, 191 Newspapers, not read by Prime Ministers, iv. 146 ;
- The Telegraph,' 1797, ix. 247, 358 ; double
acrostics in, 290 Newspapers, Commonwealth and Royalist, vii.
148, 238, 270, 348, 395 Newspapers, English, 1817-27, viii. 170, 257 ;
in 1680, xii. 243, 314, 358 Newspapers, London, of the eighteenth century,
iv. 510 ; v. 10, 70 ; their circulation in 1818,
viii. 446 ; ix. 57 Newspapers, old American, words and phrases in,
xi. 469 ; xii. 10, 50, 107, 270, 370, 492 Newton (Prof. A.) on Brisson's ' Ornithologie,'
iv. 105. Wiltshire naturalist, c. 1780, ii. 291 Newton (A. W.) on Thomas Lake Harris, x. 329 Newton (E. E.) on Cotton's Waterloo Collection,
xii. 512. Cruikshankiana, ix. 347. Eel-pie
shop, xii. 317. Grave (Robert), printseller, viii.
174. Great hollow elm, Hampstead, iii. 257.
Hampstead in song, x. 187. Hampstead omni- bus, viii. 293. Hampstead's historical houses,
viii. 146. Le Sceur's statue of Charles I., xii.
397. Littleton's ' History of Islington,' vii. 70 .
London and Birmingham Railway, viii. 167.
Maurice (Widow), printer, x. 257. Money
(Major) and his balloon, viii. 312. Octagonal
Engine House on Hampstead Heath, vii. 513.
Pedlars' rest, viii. 357. Newton (Sir Isaac), miniature of, i. 248, 315,
355, 414 ; Arago on, ii. 265 ; and the cat,
picture of, x. 188 ; and King's College, xii. 229,
294 ; ' Principia,' 1687, 229
Newton (James), bookseller, d. 1749, xi. 504
Ney (Marshal), his ancestry, viii. 288 ; his
descendants, ix. 229 Neyte, Eybury, and Hyde manors, x. 321, 461 ;
xi. 22, 174, 231
Ng, sound of, represented by n, i. 247, 291 Nice, English burials at, 1750-1800, ix. 449 ;
Capt. James King, buried at, x. 57 Nicholas, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, iii.
328, 375
Nicholas as a feminine name, xi. 87, 255 Nicholls (C.) on Hocktide at Hexton, xii. 214 Nicholson (E.) on blood used in building, iii. 76. Bung and tun, v. 422. Camelian, viii. 494. Cr^mail (Vicomte de), ix. 112. Gamester superstition, viii. 391. Hamberbonne of wheat, v. 270. " La pierre qui rage," street-name, xi. 378. Maghzen, vii. 133. Mahalla, vii. 133. Marlborough wheels, vi. 436. Moor: Moors, x. 405. Nail and the clove, iii. 41, 231. " Neither my eye nor my elbow," ix. 15. Palm Sunday and chick-peas, ix. 281. Podike, vi. 176. Prescriptions, ii. 355 ; iii. 156. Pro- vencal folk-songs, ix. 91. St. Anthony's bread, viii. 315. ' Short Whist,' xii. 357. Snakes drinking milk, x. 265. Snakes in South Africa, vi. 10. Spleen unfavourable to running, x. 202. Steelyard, vi. 282, 412. Vergel, its derivation, x. 233. Nicholson (E. W. B.) on brasses at the Bodleian,
vii. 92
Nicholson (F.) on James Peake, nonjuror, ix. 462 Nicholson (John), Lord Roberts on, ix. 2 Nicholson (Renton), his paper 'The Town,' ix.
237, 517
Nicking lead-mines, revival of old custom, vi. 405 Nicklin (T.) on anon, i. 246 ; vii. 136. Bergerode, xi. 218, 513. Cab : cabriolet in Dickens, xii. 514. Cromwell and the 117th Psalm, xii. 417. Drownd = deerhound, iv. 306. Girl, i. 245. G, hard or soft, vii. 114. Holden (H. A.), Henry Holden, x. 264. Hors d'ceuvre, 229. " Metropolitan toe," v. 357. St. Sunday, xi. 516 Nicknames : of the Army Service Corps, vii. 68, 115, 257, 457, 473 ; viii. 257 ; of the eighteenth- century, vii. 366, 430 ; viii. 37, 114, 290 ; x. 174; xii. 515; "Tear 'em," viii. 186; of persons of fashion temp. George IV., xii. 326, 515 Nicol, Earl of Errol, his contract with Huntly, viii.
206 Nicolson (Thomas), 1573-1649, his bequest, xi.
306 Nicot (Jean), 1530-1604, portrait by Goltz, v.
448 Nield (J.) on author of * Whitefriars,' iv. 447.
Nelson in fiction, iii. 77, 116 Nigh hand in the ' N.E.D.,' ix. 6, 96 Night courtship in Scotland and elsewhere, viii.
188, 255
Nightcaps, their use, i. 114 ; x. 482 Night-hag folk-lore, vii. 26, 157 Nightingale (Florence), and Robert Snelgrove's
dog, vi. 142 ; poem referring to, ix. 268, 337 Nightingale and death folk-lore, vii. 409 ; viii.
57, 192, 354
Nile, Pocock's paintings of the battle, iv. 468 Nimbus in ancient art, xi. 489 ; xii. 110, 178 Nine Maidens and other stone circles, ii. 128,
235, 396, 453
Nine men's morris, rules of the game, vi. 128, 177, 214 ; vii. 512