Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 8.djvu/541

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Notes and Queries, July 26, 1913.


SUBJECT INDEX.


533


Public-houses, "tied house " system for, 1726, 7 " Pudding-time," in ' Vicar of Bray,' 149, 215 " Pull one's leg," origin of the slang phrase, 508 Pun, history of the " Peccavi " pun, 226, 290 Purnell- Ed wards family of Stancombe Park, 469 Purrear (W.) of Cranfield, c. 1550, 330 Puxley Green, Northants place-name, 70 Pyke, Fullwood, Halley, and Parry families, 203,

277 Pyke, Mewce, Washington, and Halley families,

102, 317


Quebec Chapel, Bryanston Street, 205, 286 Queen Square, Bloomsbury, statue in, 425 Queenhoo Hall, derivation of the name, 430 Queensberry (fourth Duke of), " Old Q.," his

letters, 330 " Querke of the sea," meaning of the term, 409,

476

Quiberon Bay, battle, 1759, pictures of, 109, 216 " Quo vadis ? " origin of the phrase, 448, 497

Quotations :

A babe is fed with milk and praise, 410, 453 A few who have watched me sail away, 508 A wyvern part-per-pale addressed, 228, 294,

395

And, before he heard, 387, 434 And of St. Brigete bowre, I trow, 150, 231 And shall not this night and its long dismal

gloom, 428

And though they sleep in dungeons deep, 268 Arm of the Lord ! whose wondrous power.

251

As body when the soul has fled, 369 Bibles with cuts and comments thus go down,

269

Bolton with his bolt-in-tun, 29, 95 Courteous elegant in manners, kind, 127, 217 Dat Galenus opes, dat Justinianus honores,

208, 273

Death rides a horse of rapid speed, 430 Do you recollect the day, 168 Dreams of Lipara, 78 Each spake words of high disdain, 489 ' Effigiem Christi dum trans is pronus honora,

484

Every fool describes, 269 Ex Umbris et Imaginibus in Veritatem, 449 Farewell, vain world ! I 've had enough of

thee, 266, 449 Felix quern faciunt aliena pericula cautum,

146 For Scotland, my darling, lies full in my view,

209 For thee I quit the law's more rugged ways,

30

Full many a gem of purest ray serene, 318 Great feast of poetry, 387, 478 Guide-Books, Ehymes, Sketches, Illustrations,

269 Haec sunt Cambrisae, durty streates, et

halfpeny pisae, 128

Haec sunt'Eliae, lanterna, capella Mariae, 128 Haec sunt Hullina, Humber quodlings, et

bona vina, 128

He that dreamed that he saw his father, 78 Heart of rny heart, she has broken the heart

of me, 268 Here now the resun of his nam, 270, 333


Quotations :

Home is Home, though it is never so homely,

410, 454

I do not fear the landing on the shore, 369 I hate the French, because they are all slaves,

90, 156, 215 If I am not the rose, I have lived near it, 349,

397, 435 Immatura peris. Tu, fortunatior, annos, 90,

176

In Nature's workshop but a shaving, 251 In thy face have I seen the Eternal, 229, 296 Jugulantur homines ne nihil agatur, 69, 78.

217 Let us be grave, my boys ; here comes a fool,.

109, 176

Man is a tool-making animal, 188 Man is immortal till his work is done, 330,

373

Men are only boys grown tall, 450, 496 Mors lilia sentibus aequat, 187 Musice mentis medicina maestae, 406 My bonnie lass she smileth, 168 Nee licuit populis parvum te, Nile, videre,,

29, 115 No man can point to the exact moment when

daylight merges into darkness, 150 No more the thirsty entrance of this soil, 66 No one but a madman would throw firebrands

about, 508

O mater preclarissima, 326 Of Carthage wall I was a stone, 109, 195,

276 One ship drives East, and one drives West,.

138 Perfacile est, aiunt, prouerbia scribere

cuiuis, 155, 498

Per6 con ambo le braccia mi prese, 461 Quanto piace al mondo e breve sogno, 208,

257 Sed vacuos loculos semper Homerus habet,

208 Servi tua est conditio, ratio ad te nihil, 69,

217

Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, 7 Tantus amor veri, nihil est quod noscere

malim, 229, 314 Tela praivisa minus nocent, 246 The depraved nature of man, 10, 136 The fields in blossom flamed and flushed, 489 The lowing herd winds slowly o'er the lea, 270,

316, 371

The wind might blow through an English- man's house, 90 There are very few persons who pursue

science with true dignity, 288 There in that smallest bud lay furled, 257 There is a great deal of human nature in

man,' 489

There is no adaptation or universal applica- bility in men, 369 There is no unbelief. Whoever plants a

seed, 50

There was a Knight of Bethlehem, 189, 257 There was " Father Mac " in a gorgeous vest,

329, 377 These children are dear to Me. Be a mother

to them, 130

Those she refuses, she treats still, 268 Thy works, thine alms, B,nd all thy good

endeavour, 387, 434 Time loosely spent will not again be won, 369