Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 3.djvu/628

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INDEX.


Notes and Queries, July 29, 1905.


Precedence, patents of, 90, 151

Prerogative Court of Canterbury Will Registers, 488

Prescriptions, derivation of symbols, 156

Prickle-bat, its various names, 5

Pride, used as a verb, 186

Prideaux (Archdeacon Humphrey), hia 'Directions to

Churchwardens,' 264, 317 Prideaux (Col. W. F.) on Bacon or Usher? 165

Bibliographical notes on Dickens and Thackeray, 22, 131

Bibliographical queries, 292

Brayley's ' Londiniana,' 406

Coliseums old and new, 53, 496

Egyptian Ball, Piccadilly, 451

Fleet Street, Jacobean houses in, 250; No. 53, 493

Hollicke or Holleck, co. Middlesex, 435

London cemeteries in 1860, 56

London street-names, 181

Martello towers, 252

Saxton family, of Saxton, co. York, 175

Sheridan's ' Critic,' 345

Split infinitive, 17, 150, 295

Swedish royal family, 456

" The" as part of title, 115

Willesden, the place-name, 275

Wotton's letters, 805 Prideaux (W. R. B.) on Cicero's busts, 205

Cranmer's library, 24

Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, 451

Sirpi (Father Paul) in English literature, 232 Prisoners, their clothes as perquisites, 1678, 369, 472

  • Private History of the C jurt of England,' by Mrs.

S. Green, key to, 321

Privilege and sacrilege, use of the words, 268 Progressive, as a party term, 67 Prosopoyall, use of the word by Montaigne, 86 Proverbial phrases, French, 203 Proverbs and Phrases :

Born on Holy Thursday, and idle, 287

Broken heart, 9, 77, 132

By hook or by crook, 409

Call a spade a spade, 169, 217

Cock-and-bull story, 268, 334

Cut the loss, 69, 156

Dun is in the mire, 11, 57, 155

Eau bdnite de cour, 204

Etre n6 coifite, 203

February fill dyke, 248, 314, 333

Fortune favours fools, 14

God rest you merry, 49, 116

God yow, 389

Gospel of fatness, 49

Hungry forties, 87

In the straw, 280

Jolly as a sandboy, 260

Mad as a hatter, 20

Monmouth Street of literature, 188, 252

Month's mind : to have a month's mind, 54

Persona grata, 448

Piper : who pays the piper calls the tune, 468

Pop goes the weasel, 430, 491

Pricher d'exemple, 204 St. Pulchre's boots, 173

Spaniard's discipline, 371

Ugly rush, 165

Wrong side of the bed, 409, 474


Pseudonym, " Gray's Elegy " as, 287

Purdonium, name for coalscuttle, 388, 436

Pusey (E. B.), and celebration of solitary Mass, 8, 95

Pye (H. J.), Poet Laureate, read at head of troops, 345

Pynchbeke (Rev. J.), of Colchester, his biography, 421

Q in the ' H.E.D.,' 146

Quaintry or Queatery family, 289

Quandary, its etymology and pronunciation, 4, 217

Quarter Sessions, their records, 287, 337, 355

Quarterstaves, origin of the name, 165, 235

Queen's uniform, 420

Queens, their surnames, 114, 174, 351, 412

Quenington, Gloucestershire, Knights Hospitallers at, 489

Quentery or Quaintry family, 289

Quin (James), memorial at Ba f ,h, 185

Quirinus on con- contraction, 250 "Gentle" Shakespeare, 292 Tarleton and the sign of "The Tabor," 7 Quiz, The,' 1797, on Goldsmith, 49, 152

Quotations :

A thousand workmen toiled to build Versailles,

487

Amice, quisquis es, 128 And has it come to this ? 49, 171 And thou, blest star of Europe's darkest hour, 83 As in a gravegarth count to see, 8, 75 As she sat that evening in her chamber, 269 At the close of the day, 360 Be sure that Love ordained for souls more meek, 8 Beating about the bush without starting the

hare, 88, 171 Bolt from the blue, 120

Bright chanticleer proclaims the dawn, 227, 276 But for the grace of God there goes John Brad- ford, 20, 46

Che p vr sorriso, ed & dolore, 88 Conscious in life of immortality, 489 Dogmatism is puppyism full grown, 5, 94 Do the work that "s nearest, 469 Friend more than servant, 469 God called up from dreams, 49, 115 Greatly begin ! though thou have time, 469 Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepe cadendo, 47 He dropped the shuttle and the loom stood still,

469 He plucked off both his wings and made him

quills, 480

He sat beside the lowly door, 328 Heart of my heart, 29 Here wander two beautiful rivers, 188 Heu vitam perdidi, operose nihil agendo, 88 Hie liber est in quo quaerit, 447 Humanum est errare, 78 I sit with my feet in a brook, 408, 498 If I forget, 88

If pathos be a sense of loss, 88 In antient days when Dame Eliza reign'd, 468 In cauda venenum, 428, 476 I 've no money, so you see, 469 L'amour est 1'histoire da la vie des femmes, 148 Les grandes douleurs sont muettes, 148 Let the wealthy and great, 223, 353, 435 Leurs Merits sont des vols qu'ils nous ont faits d'avance, 148, 335