Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 7.djvu/656

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INDEX.


Notes and Queries. July 27, 1907.


Printers and booksellers, Cambridge, 26, 75 Prior (W. R.) on Albert Bernard, 308 Prisoner's base, obsolete English game, 512 Pronunciation : Latin, in England, 108, 170, 294 ;

wound, 328, 390 ; war, 514

Protogenes, his piinting of dog frothing at mouth, 373 Provence, pastoral astronomy in, 104 Proverbs, French, collected by Abbd Tuet, 49 Proverbs, old, new light on, 407, 457 Proverbs and Phrases : As poor as rats, 469 Carrying coals to Newcastle, 105 C'est le cheval aux quatre pieds blancs, 378 Conscientious objection, 165 Der Hase brouet, 213

Esprit de 1'escalier, 189, 237, 250, 295, 393 Every man has his price, 367, 470, 492 Face upon conscience, 288 II a les pieds blancs, 378 Lead his own horse, 367 Mony a pickle maks a mickle, 11, 112, 215 Mother of dead dogs, 457

Non sentis, inquit, te ultra malleum loqui ? 249 On the mending hand, 387 Ossing comes to bos<ing, 69, 135 Parson's nose, 420 Paws off, Pompey, 329, 377 Peacock feathers unlucky, 240 Penny saved is twopence got, 48, 97 Petty France, 120 Pop goes the weasel, 107 Possession nine points of the law, 167 Postage stamps first perforated, 320 Pull one's leg, 164 Eoad of words, 290, 354 Kump of a goose, 190, 418 Set up my (his) rest, 53, 175 Sham Abraham, 469 So long, 160

Sordid bonds of empire, 348, 417 Telling tales out of school, 407 Thumb-hand side, 467 To go to pot, 106 Toujours perdrix, 407, 457 Unconscionable time dying, 8 White man's burden, 348, 417

Public Office, Police Office, Police Court, 47, 90, 217 Public service, long, 7

Pugh (A. M.) on people to be avoided or cultivated, 175 'Pull one's leg," U.S. slang term, 164 'Punch,' and Lord Brougham, 246; on Oldridge's

Balm of Columbia, 289 Quadi and Marcomanni, Gibbon on, 89 Quapladde, family name, 14, 256 Querist on " Kingsley's Stand," 109 Quilt, use and meaning of the word, 244 Quintain, obsolete English game, 403 Quotations :

A long day's journey there lay before, 89

A primrose by the river's brim, 28

A qua ego nullum confiteor aetatis mese tempus

abhorruisse, 309, 374

A sable cloud turns forth her silver lining, 60 All over loathsome with affectation of the fine

gentleman, 309, 374 'AXX' ol yap aQv^ovvTi^ 158


Quotations :

Amongst the wide waves set. 208, 254

An old lady in Babylon bred, 448

And while the priest did eat the people stared, 309

At enim tropheeum, 49, 158

Bells they shall ring for thee, 428

Beware lest it be the desire for change, 49

Black is the raven, black is the rook, 212

Blessings beyond hope or thought, 40

But the man himself with his mind and heart, 309

But when I came into merry Carlisle, 489

Christian soldier, must we sever ? 269, 39 1, 413, 516

Cloth of gold, do not despise, 245

Custom lie upon thee with a weight, 508

Did we think victory great, 228

Au' r]/jispai yvvaiKOS, 453

Errata alterius quisques correxerit, 149

Est bene non potuit dicere, dixit, erit, 338

Et la bonne vieille de dire, 149

For those short hours of happiness I thank thee, 508

For Witherington needs must I wayle, 426

Fought full fairly with their wrathful hands, 309

Frescas belvederes, 190, 233, 295, 391

Friends such as we desire are dreams and fables,

389

Gentle Achates, reach the tinder-box, 396 Get money, my son, get money if you can, 33 Give my youth, my faith, my sword, 10 Have you heard that it was good to gain the day,

228

He came on the angel of victory's wing, 149 He died as such a man should die, 149 He nothing common did or mean, 211 How vain is life, 356

I expect to pass through this world but once, 140 I hear a voice you cannot hear, 55 I must confess your wine and vittle, 232 I praise the Frenchman, 328 Icicles clink in the milkmaid's pail, 208 If more is needed to be known, 69 In marriage are two happy things allowed, 309,

374, 453 Je ne voudrais pas reprendre mon coeur de cette

sorte, 215

La vie est vaine, 15

Let Persian dames th' umbrella's ribs display, 267 Life is as tedious as a twice-told tale, 356 Man dwells apart, but not alone, 208 Man never rises higher than when he knows not,

208,435, 514 Matches and tunder, 396 Mony a pickle rnaks a mickle, 11, 112, 215 Ne gubernatoris quidem artem tranquillum mare,

337

No star ever rose or set without influence some- where, 389, 453

Non sentis, inquit, te ultra malleum loqui ? 249, 354 Not by the power of commerce, art, or pen, 233 O Charidas, what is there down below ? 228, 274,

412

O marriage, happiest, easiest, softest state, 309 O mortal man, thou art born in sin, 309 O sinner ! I come by Heaven's decree, 35 O ye who patiently explore, 200 Of all the operas that Verdi wrote, 12 Of those for whom we fond emotions cherish, 158