Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 9.djvu/669

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Notes and Queries, Jan. 28, 1922. SL EJECT INDEX. 553 Place-Names : Cholerton, 17 Chollerford, 17 Damas Lane, Swindon, 17 " Dreamthorp." 150, 197 Gallows Gate, 493 Hangman, 493 Lombard Street : see under London Milk, Butter and Cheese Streets, 169, 214, 259, 413, 498 Moneacht, 191 Netting Barn Farm : see under London Petty France : see under London Skelder, 272, 313, 378 Skeldergate, 272, 313, 378 Waterlooville, 31 Placentia, Palace of = Greenwich Palace, 430, 475 ; Placentinus (Raph.), 129, 218, 295 Placentius (J. Leo), 218 Plague pits, sites of : see under London Plugenet and Waleran family, 489 Plunket (Lady Madge), pen-name, 371. 518 Plunkett (Archbishop), his death, 529 Poems for children, 98 " Poilu," use and meaning of word, 342 Pompeii, destruction of, 175; the story of the J sentry at, 214 Poole (Captain Robert), navigator, memorial to, j 510 Pope and Smollett on indexing, 48 Person on relative merits of Greek and English, 407 Porto Bello, capture of by Admiral Vernon, 321, 350, 393 " Potentate to the Pope " = " Podesta " or magis- j trate in the Papal States, 47 Powell (G. E. J.), 529 Pratt (Sir John), m. circa 1710, his ancestry, 310, ' 358 Pratt family, 310, 358 Prayer, sixteenth-century, used at Armistice Day service, 1921, 431 Prayer Book : copy used at royal weddings from 1761 to 1893, 188 Price (Sir Henry), 32 ; (? Herbert), 75 Price (Theodore), 170 Price family of Bath, 5 1 Priests, pre-Reformatkm, and marriage, 290, 335, 453, 476 " Prime Minister," earliest use of title, 446 Prince Rupert's fort, Cork harbour, 48 Pringle (Alexander), b. 1791, letter on Waterloo, 381 Prior (Matthew), ambassador to Paris 1712 . Jacob Tonsoii as spy on, 482 Prisoners who have survived hanging, 1 8 Privilege of Templars and Hospitallers, 12, 55 Privy Council in 1672 and word " cabal," 291 Pronunciation, cockney, 17, 54, 77 ; see also Accent ' Prophecies of Reform,' 47 " Proposal," earliest use of word, 196 Proverbial sayings, 90, 177, 211 Proverbs and Phrasas :- Acid test, 94 Between the Devil and the deep sea, 371 Born out of a tole-dish, 354 Burnt his boats, 177 Butter is mad twice a year, 330, 375, 415 By the clock of my belly 'tis the dinner hour, 130, 178, 218 Proverbs and Phrases: Curry favour, 77, 92 Drink is the shortest way out of Manchester, 90, 177 Drug in the market, 529 Flashing the tin, 469 Floreat Etona, 111, 153, 234, 277, 313

  • Heads " as the pieman says, 449. 494, 536

Hell, Hull and Halifax, 292 Howlers, 56 Humanity the sphere, 130, 179 It's a long time between drinks, 292, 333, 438 Jew's eye full of buttermilk, 169 Make them eat beans, 91 Not lost, but gone before, 529 Religion of all sensible men, 52, 94, 299 Sapiens dominabitur astris, 509 Sphere of humanity, 130 Speaking through one's hat, 449 Tantary bobus, 71 , 136 Tenant in capite, 156, 257 Walking Dictionary, 527 Warwick, to go to, 71 We're in the same boat, 298 What phrases, 271 Wild-cat schemes, 11, 133 Yours is not a family : it is only a collection of spare parts, 270 " P.R.S.V.R.," &c., Persevere, &c., 358 Pryce (Shadrach), Dean of St. Asaph, his burial- place, 211 4 Punch and Judy,' 170 " Pye House," 34 Quakers, longevity among, 289 Quarme (George), Westminster scholar, 91 Queen Hoo Hall : see under Hertfordshire " Quiet neighbour," Gloucestershire name for valerian, 29 Quotations : A bold peasantry, their country's pride, 189, 238 A man convinced against his will, 491 A painter-priest . . . two hundred years ago, 112 A stormy sea at the dawn of day . . ., 355 Ah ! when shall all men's good be each man's rule, 112, 159 And when I died, like Flora fair, 218 Antic in girlish broideries . . .,251 At last she raised her hands appalled, 92, 178 At length when the candles burn in their sockets, 251 Beneath the stream shallow and light .... 372, 415 Cheese, on, 188, 235, 255, 455, 516 Each seemed than each more soft, and each than other smoother, 130, 178 Fancy free . . . lonely as a star, 112 Get leave to work in this world, 112 God give us men ! 191, 239 God in the garden heard and smiled, 112, 218 His turban was the doudlars plet, 410 Hops, Reformation, Bays, and Beer . . .,48 I like the man who faces what he must, 410,455 Life is a story in volumes three, 92 Lord Chatham with his sword undrawn, 355. 394