Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 10.djvu/539

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Notes and Queries, Jan. 30, 1915.


SUBJECT INDEX.


533


Plautilla, d. 211, date of her birth, 49

Pococke (Lydia A.)=T. B. Skottowe, c. 1784, 448

Poe (Edgar A.), his ' To One in Paradise,' 72

' Poems on Several Occasions,' much-used title,

127

Poets, Danish lyrical, of modern times, 18 Poets' Gallery, Fleet Street, 389, 434 " Pogrom," derivation of the word, 427 Poole (John), 1786-1872, poet, his birthplace,

329 Pope (Alexander) the elder, and the house at

Binfleld, 65

" Popular," early use of the word, 228 Porter (Jane), statement in her ' Scottish Chiefs,'

469

Portraits, family, mentioned in wills, 427 Possessive case, Ben Jonson and the, 204 Postage and ' The Illustrated London News,' 250 Posts and chains in the City, 1648, 149 Potter (Abraham and Humphrey), steam-engines

erected by, c. 1725, 450 Power (Pierce), J.P., Ireland = Teresa Coppinger,

1789, 388 Power family, 108 " Practical politics," use of the phrase, c. 1825,

467

Princess and crumpled rose-leaf, story, 489 Princesses, mediaeval, dates of birth, 49 Printers' phrases, earliest instances of, 106 Prints : ' Chancellor of University of Oxford,"

1834, 48, 97 ; military, West Norfolk Militia,

67 ; " protean scenery," 1837, 409 ; of the

Gunpowder Plot conspirators, 469 Prior (Matthew) and Wrexham Pair, 1709, 75 " Private hotels," origin of the term, 348, 391 Privy Councillors, duties and privileges of, 18, 58 Procter (Adelaide Ann), her mother, 349, 393 Prophecy of 1814, peace for a hundred years, 288 " Protean scenery in prints, 1837, 409 Protestant Dissenters, registers of, 30, 93, 193

Proverbs and Phrases:

A sandy pig for an acorn, 248

Accidents will happen in the best-regulated families, 271, 296, 351

Among the blind the one-eyed man is king, 15

As cool as a clock, 247

As sound as a roach's, 468

Bolt from the blue, 448

Chatter about Harriet, 266

Every man has his price, 66

Man of the world, 408

O si sic omnes, 429, 474

Quite a few, 487

The hindmost wheel of the cart, 171, 377

The weakest goes to the wall, 27, 78

There 's some water where the stags drown, 29, 77

Wait and see, 158

What you don't know won't hurt you, 171 Providence, the voyage of, under Capt. Bligh, 17,

116, 153, 277

Prussian eagles in Piccadilly, 506 Przemysl, place-name, its pronunciation, 410. 456,

497

Publishing and bookselling, bibliography of, 225 Pullen (Rev. H. W.), his ' Fight at Dame Europa's

School,' 1871, 268, 314, 356 Puritan ordeal in the 19th century, 467 Puritans in Newfoundland, c. 1621, 88, 237 Pyke, Parry, Freeman, and Bruce families, 9 " Pyramid in London," meaning of the phrase, 510


Quartermain (Roger), his ' Conquest of Canter- bury Court,' 390

' Quaver ; or, Songster's Pocket Companion,' 1854, the publisher, 250

Quayle (Major J.), Royal Artillery, d. 1810, 349

" Queen Elinor in the ballad," referred to 1766, 150, 194

Queen's College, Oxford, inscription on brass, 387, 432

Quinton (G.), b. 1779, artist, 108, 155

Quotations :

A dreamer of the common dreams, 129, 177

Adorned with every noble virtue, 387

And I still onward haste to my last night,

57

And where thy footstep gleams, 72 Atque ego in summo oratore fingendo talem

informabo, 89, 217 Behold 1 ye tarts ! one moment spare the

text, 449, 498 Blest be the hour wherein I bought this book,

170

Bolt from the blue, 448 But art Thou come, dear Saviour ? 129 But the drum muttered " Come," 230, 276,

353

But the good deed through the ages, 148 Ccelum ipsum petimus stultitia, 69, 117 Compassion for another's woe, 27 Convictions can build cathedrals ; opinions

cannot, 275

Dii laneos habent pedes, 270, 314, 335 For the frantic word not spoken, 449 Forget not, earth, thy disinherited, 388, 433 Gigantic daughter of the West, 10, 117 Gone are the glorious Greeks of old, 387 Good deeds immortal are they cannot die,

369 Ha'e faith in God, and He will see th' thro',

250, 457 I heard them praising this grey French

country, 211 If you call a bad thing bad, you do little,

169 In Paradise I learned to ease my soul in song,

148, 198

Indian that galloped full speed to the sea, 70 Le vin est verse ; il faut le boire, 270, 336 Les courtisans sont des jetons, 88 Magna est veritas et (?), 389, 494 Mourn not for Venice. Though her fall, 387 My son is my son till he takes him a wife, 429,

477

Nihil tetigit quod non ornavit, 468 Non minima pars ervditionis, 387 Not all who seem to fail have failed indeed,

490

Not in y* ardent course, as where he woes, 47 Nulli penetrabilis astro, 69, 117 O si sic omnes, 429, 474 Orator qualis adhuc nemo fortasse fuerit, 89,

217

Out of the strain of the doing, 290, 336 Over the hills and far away, 468, 515 Perimus licitis, 270, 314, 335 'l>p6vtfj.oL ws oi 6<pas, 508 Prayers that e'en spoke and Pity seem'd to

call, 69 Prends le premier conseil d'une femme, 270