TENTH SEEIES.
221
Proverbs and Phrases :
Sleep the sleep of the just, v. 20
Slovak, xii. 242, 298
So long, vii. 160
Solidarity of the human race, vi. 29
Somersetshire dialect, viii. 248
Sordid bounds of empire, vii. 348, 417
Souvent femme varie, v. 244
Sow an action, reap a habit, viii. 40
Spaniards' discipline, ii. 426, 533 ; iii. 371
Spanish village to me, ii. 86
Spartam quam nactus es exornes, vi. 486
Spick and span, v. 160
Spit of his father, x. 220
Stafford blue, vi. 149, 214, 237
Standing midway in air, like Trisanku, v. 244
Stew in their own juice, xii. 206
Stick to your tut, xi. 307, 417 ; xii. 15
Still waters turn no mills, ix. 190
Storm in a teacup, xi. 388, 456
Stoughton bottles, vi. 8
Stricken field, ii. 266
Strike while the iron is hot, ii. 23
Stripping cows, xii. 409, 476
Sub rosa, ix. 189, 316, 335, 432
Summer has set in with its usual severity,
i. 38
Sweep flees away, xi. 226, 277, 374 T : It suits to a T, i. 478 Talk of the town, x. 282, 374 Tant que la niche est vide, le saint peut
revenir, xii. 327
Telling tales out of school, vii. 407 ; viii. 55 Tenir une queue de vache a la main, x. 188,
273
Tha' woodin image, xi. 305, 396, 517 That same, iv. 448, 515 That's another pair of shoes, xi. 169, 252 That's another story, xi. 107 The better the day, the better the deed, i.
448 ; ii. 16
The hand that rocks the cradle, v. 273, 357 The way to heaven is as near by sea, xi. 447 There are more acres in Yorkshire than letters
in the Bible, xii. 509
Thimbleful of sense is worth a pound of non- sense, v. 429
Thumb-hand side, vii. 467 Thylaco maior erit accessoria sarcinula, vi.
486
Till the cows come home, viii. 507 Tongue in the cheek, ii. 148 Top the candle, viii. 347 Torne withe wylde horsez, x. 281 Tottenham is turned French, 1536, ix. 67 ;
xi. 144 Toujours perdrix, vii. 407, 457 ; viii. 55, 136,
215 ; ix. 118, 172 Towers of silence, iv. 264
Travailler pour le Koi de Prusse, i. 195 ; v. 206 Trust in God and keep your powder dry,
vi. 369
Twenty thousand ruffians, i. 107 Two strings to his bow, ii. 23 Ugly rush, iii. 165
Una mano lava 1'altra, ix. 329, 418, 493 Unconscionable time dying, vii. 8 Under a cloud, xi. 389, 453 Under the fly paper, vi. 447 Upon a summer's day, 1320, ix. 208 Verify your references, vi. 62, 131, 154, 174 Veterem ferendo (fert) injuriam, vi. 486
Proverbs and Phrases :
Virtue of necessity, i. 8, 76, 110, 136 We are all Radicals by sentiment, xii. 490 What is got on the Devil's back, xii. 489 What Lancashire thinks to-day, ix. 329, 457 ;
xii. 428
What the Devil said to Noah, xii. 10, 93 What you but see when you haven't a gun,
ix. 108, 217, 493 ; x. 38, 255 When the Devil goes a-nutting, xii. 388 When the steed is stolen, steek the stable door,
ii. 23
Where there's muck there's money, x. 13 Whip in, xii. 167 Whipping the cat, ix. 5, 317, 494 White hen that never lays astray, xi. 448 ;
xii. 16
White man's burden, vii. 348, 417 With full swinge, viii. 349 Work like a Trojan, ii. 168 Wrong side of the bed, iii. 409, 474 Yeoman service, viii. 89 Proverbs and popular phrases in collections of
MSS., x. 281, 374, 458 Providence, Island of, i. 13
Providence University, Ohio, its degrees, vi. 110 Provincial booksellers, lists of, v. 141, 183, 242, 297, 351, 415, 481, 492 ; xi. 127. See also Booksellers and printers.
Provincial book-trade, British, 1641-67, x. 141 Provincialisms, Devon, v. 490 Provins, Seine-et-Marne, under English rule, xii.
187 Prowse (G. R. F.) on hagiological terms used by
seamen, ii. 147 Proxege and Senage, in records of St. Paul's, xi.
27, 77
Proximo, early use of the expression, x. 447 Prunty^ Bronte, origin of the surname, viii. 270 Prussians as a national name, x. 407 Prynne (William), his MSS. inquired after, viii.
168 Pryor's Bank, Fulham, its contents, xii. 128, 172,
237 Psalm cxvii. and Cromwell at battle of Dunbar,
x. 268, 436 ; xii. 417. See also Bible. Psalmon (F.) on " A glutted tiger," &c., x. 388 Psalter, Nottingham, 1220, illuminated manu- script, v. 430
Psalter and Latin MS. at Ugbrooke, i. 109 Pseudonym, "Gray's Elegy" as, iii. 287 Pseudonymous literature, authorities on, x. 81 Ptolemy III. Euergetes, his wife Berenice, iv. 126 ,
193 Public-house, evolution from caravanserai to, iv.
308, 413 ; v. 72
Public meeting, use of the term, iv. 148, 213 Public Office, Police Office, Police Court, vii.
47, 90, 217
Public opinion, its journalistic history, xii. 188 Public school, oldest, i. 166, 215, 257, 269 Public service, long, vii. 7 Public speaking in Shakespeare's day, viii. 130,
415 ; ix. 38, 297, 313
Publisher, music, earliest British, viii. 369, 475 Publishers, London book, c. 1807, viii. 286 Publishers and booksellers, London, ix. 89, 137,
218 Publishers' Catalogues, earliest known, ii. 50,
118, 357, 455, 518
Publishing and bookselling, bibliography of, i. 81, 142, 184, 242, 304, 342 ; ii. 11 ; v. 361, 476