Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/237

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TENTH SEKIES.


229


Quotations :

On s'eveille, on se leve, on s'habille, vi. 234

On the knees of the gods, vi. 160

On the ninth day of November, xi. 9, 56

Once I was alive, and had ilesh, ix. 427

Once of old upon a mountain, xii. 129

Once so merrily hopt she, iii. 127

Once, we confess, beneath the patriot's cloak,

vii. 237 One eye down the hatchway cast, vi. 149,

192

One impulse from a vernal wood, vii. 28 One of those unwelcome preachers, xii. 128 One smile can glorify a day, xi. 29 One talks of mildew and of frost, ix. 12, 56 Our bootless host of high-born beggars, ii. 153 Our lives are songs, iii. 249 Our Master hath a garden, xi. 148, 196 Our new-appointed vicar, vi. 130, 173, 217 Our noisy years seem moments in the being,

xii. 268, 335 Our plenteous streams a various race supply,

xii. 158 Oves et boves et cetera pecora campi, i. 188,

297, 437

Partus aureus, i. 188 ; ix. 37 Parva sed apta, iv. 387

Pass like night from land to land, xi. 49, 94 Patience and gentleness are power, vii. 208 Pax intrantibus, x. 506 Pay all their debts with the roll of his drum,

xii. 268, 335 Pearls cannot equal the whiteness of his

teeth, iv. 307, 355

Pectoris et cordis pariter proprieque, x. 128 People to be avoided or cultivated, vii. 130,

175

Per aspera ad ardua, ix. 288 Per Mare et per Terras, per quod tegit, x. 128,

271

Per modum illuminationis, feruntur, i. 188 Perchance from Salem's holier fields return'd,

vii. 213 Perish the roses and the palaces of kings,

xii. 288, 355 Pinnacled dim in the intense inane, viii. 347,

374 Pitt had a great future behind him, ii. 49,

158

>lato, that plank from the wreck, vii. 208

Play me a march low-toned and slow, vi. 48 Plus je connais les hommes, x. 188, 273 ;

xii. 292, 300

Poata nascitur non fit, iii. 433 Poets that lasting marble seek, v. 60 Poor John was a gallant captain, i. 32 Popery, tyranny, and wooden shoes, vii. 327,

393

Portantur avari, viii. 109 Possess one's soul, x. 247 Posui Deum adjutorem meum, vii. 29, 78 Potus gluten amicorum, i. 188 Pour qui le monde visible existe, x. 247 Praise is devotion, fit for noble minds,

xii. 288, 355

Praises let Britons sing, ix. 350; x. 218 Pray tell me what's a Puseyite, vi. 217 Prayer is a building to God a chapel in our

heart, i. 406 Prefaces to books are like signs to public- houses, ix. 229 ; x. 113 Premant torcular qui vendemiarunt, v. 27


Quotations :

Prima Sahttantes atque altera continet hora,

x. 128, 271, 356

Prince of the Sidereal Realms, xii. 27 Prius erit glacies flammiger ignis, i. 188 Proud of his royal bride, the richer spoil,

xii. 328 Quadrijugis evectus equis sol aureus exit, ix.

370, 455 ; x. 55 Quae fuit durum pati, meminisse dulce est,

xi. 247

Quse venit indigno pcena, vii. 228, 274 Quaeris quo victu Cornubia gaudeat ? viii. 195 Qual ramicel a ramo, vi. 149 Quam nihil ad genium, v. 27, 116 Que convenere, xii. 469

Queis tentant et ar antes arenas, x. 127, 271 Quern Deus vult perdere prius dementat,

xii. 265 Quhen to Makferland, wicht and bauld,

vii. 231

Qui que tu sois, voici ton maitre, x. 69 Qui souvent se pese bien se connait, iii. 348 ;

iv. 14

Quid est fides ? xi. 230, 296 Quis nisi mentis inops oblatum resquat

aurum ? i. 188 Quisquis errantem videt hunc Libelluni,

vi. 353 Quod efficit tale, illud ipsum est magis tale,

i. 188

Quod expendi habui, i. 196 Quod Reges Indorum protinus aureis, x. 127,

270, 356

Quos India pascit Onagros, x. 127, 270, 271 Quoth William Penn to Martyr Charles,

x. 227 ; xi. 55

Quotidie viro nubit, x. 128, 271 Radnorshire, Radnorshire, vii. 205 Rag-proud and saucy, xii. 207 Ragotin, ce matin, v. 328 Read the Rede of this Old Roof Tree,

vii. 314

Recte vivere ; Alterum baud laedere, x. 469 Regem occidere nolite timere bonum est,

xi. 227

Regio non alia in tpta Asia, x. 127, 270 Regula Presbyteri jubet hoc pro lege teneri,

vi. 373, 492

Religion of all sensible men, iii. 80 ; viii. 180 Reliquas etiam virtutes frugalitas continet,

x. 173

Rest after toil, i. 428, 474 Rest thee on this mossy pillow, vii. 208 Rich beyond the drams of avarice, x. 220 Robin promis'd me, vii. 231 Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor, iii. 448 Romae, Lutetiae ac Venetiae, x. 127, 270 Rostia disertus amat, i. 188 Rustica gens est optima flens, ii. 405 Sabina saw, but would not see, vii. 69 St. George to save a maid, iii. 227, 276 Sal et saliva, i. 368

Salus civium in Legibus consistit, x. 127 Sanguis martyrum, semen Ecclesiae, x. 487 Sardana, le preux chevalier, vii. 509 Satan now is wiser than of yore, vi. 149 Say well is good, but do well is better, vi. 368 Scalam naturae in qua inest et occultum

occulti, i. 188

Scientia non habet inimicum praeter ignoran- tem, i. 188 ; ii. Ill