Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/134

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GENERAL INDEX.


Hedingham Castle, Queen Elizabeth's visit to, xii.

328, 396, 411, 478

Heel-ball and cobblers' wax, difference, v. 166, 256 Heelis (J. L.) on Cornish motto : " One and all," x. 290. Dog and the gamekeeper, vii. 107. Grimms' 'Popular Stories,' i. 262 ; ii. 93. Miraculous bolt, vii. 46. N. & Q.' in fiction, vii. 85. Paul, Emperor of Kussia, his murder, v. 23. Petar or petard, x. 312

" Heels o'er gowdie," its meaning, iii. 386, 453 Heer-breeads, its origin and use, iv. 417, 468 Heidelberg gallery, formed by the Comte de Grain- berg, xii. 327, 454

Heighes and Kitchener families, xi. 348 Heine (H.), his ' Princess Sabbath,' xii. 103 Heiress, Scots, as a recluse in Bologna, vii. 488 Heit = father, in modern Friesian, v. 356 Hele = to conceal, iv. 47, 92, 174, 315, 408 Helicon, mistaken references by Chaucer and Spenser,

viii. 102 Hell, spiders in, ii. 366 ; poets' descriptions of, iv.

126, 217, 296, 336, 423 Hellenist on booksellers' catalogues, xii. 305 Hellequin and his household, xi. 173 Hell-in-harness, use of the phrase, xi. 187, 338, 417 Helm, naval pronunciation of the word, xii. 257 Helm (W. H.) on "Two blades of grass," ix. 112. Wall calendars with quotations from Shakespeare, vii. 335

Helmerow (W. B.) on Castle Carewe, xii. 194 Helmets, horns on, i. 347 Helmsley. See Hamlake. Help : To help, followed by an infinitive, v. 476 ;

vi. 30 Helpmate and helpmeet, ii. 105, 185, 310, 453, 496 ;

iii. 50, 71, 196

Helps (Sir Arthur), his definition of genius, xi. 512 Helsby (Thomas), his death, xi. 400 Helston, " Hal-an-Tow " at, iv. 287 Hemans (F. D.), her 'The Lost Pleiad,' viii. 309, 371.

Musical setting of her songs, xi. 366, 498 Hemington (Nicholas), his biography, v. 47 Hemington Church, Leicester, its desecration, xii.

228, 278

Hemingway (Samuel), his biography, v. 415 Hemlock tree, iv. 309

Hemming (R.) on ' Book- World,' iv. 48; vii. 177. Brougham (Lord), his confession, vi. 234. Forlong (General), viii. 365. ' Gerald Fitzgerald,' iv. 148. Greek pronunciation, vii. 351. Hollingsworth (Alfred Johnston), viii. 123. Installation of a midwife, vii. 197. 'John Bull,' a newspaper, vi. 353. "Mala stamina vitae," xii. 269. Menilek, iv. 7 ; viii. 470. Napoleon : Marbeuf, iv. 188. Pagination, vi. 373 ; vii. 316. Passy or Passey family, vi. 429. Regimental nicknames, r. 380. Shakespeare v. Bacon, x. 497. Shakespeare's Shylock, xi. 266

Hernpsheres, place-name, i. 327, 431 ; ii. 154 Hems (H.) on abacus, its meaning, viii. 412. African names, iv. 519. Aldgate and Whitechapel, iv. 386. Angels as supporters, i. 15. Anglo-Hebrew slang : kybosh, vii. 277. Antwerp Cathedral, ix. 352. Artists' mistakes, iv. 293; v. 319. Atterbury (Bishop), iv. 137. Bailey, its meaning, iii. 269.


Bandy- legged = knock- kneed, vii. 265. Bellman, vi. 472. Besom, its meaning, i. 118. Bible origin- ally written in Dutch, v. 198. Black images of the Madonna, iv. 135, 315. Blackmore of Bishop's Nympton, viii. 468. Blankets, vii. 155. Bodley pedigree, x. 497. Bonaparte relic, iii. 175, 373. Boulder stones, vii. 136. Breton calvaries, iv. 523. " Broaching the admiral," ii. 154. Brothers Mayor and Town Clerk at same time, v. 176. Buller pedigree, vi. 487. Burial of a suicide, ix. 96 ; upright, xi. 465. Burrington family, vi. 473. Caen Wood, Highgate, i. 273. Cape Town in 1844, iii. 96, 196 ; v. 526. Chair, an ancient, viii. 393. Chal : Romany Chal, iii. 476. Charles II. in West Dorset, x. 293. Chest, old wooden, v. 196 ; vi. 392 ; ix. 517. Chimneys in ancient houses, iv. 502. Chinese punishments, ii. 513. Chocolate, ix. 489. Christ Church, Woburn Square, viii. 447. Church, wooden pillars in, ii. 414. Churches, without fonts, ii. 393 ; washed away by the sea, iv. 460 ; built of unhewn stone, v. 215. Churchyards, their area, vii. 113. Clarke (Samuel, M.P., and Christopher), vi. 155. Clock, old, v. 269. Conduits, old, of London, xi. 75. Cooke (Sir Thomas), Sheriff of London, viii. 149. Cork leg, viii. 307. Corporation chains and maces, viii. 446. Corpse on shipboard, vi. 313. Cresset- stones, iii. 477. Crossing knives and forks, ix. 14. Curate, a chained, v. 403. Devil's door, iv. 127. Devonshire, witchcraft in, ii. 466. Devonshire Dumpling, xi. 473. Dibble, its meaning, iii. 407. Drangut, its meaning, ii. 118. Earthworks at Bur- pham, x. 214. Eleanor Cross, Waltham, vi. 413. Fees for searching parish registers, xi. 252. Female worker in iron, vii. 466. Fire on the hearth kept burning, viii. 412. Fireplaces in cathedral churches, ix. 216. Freaks of nature, ix. 115. Galluses = braces, vi. 330. Gloves at fairs, i. 492; ii. 151. Gorges (Sir Ferdinando), xii. 154. Granite tram- way, iv. 350, 425. Hansom (J. A.), ii. 58. Haw- son Oak and its Greek cross, ix. 356. Healing stone, vi. 477. Heath (Benjamin), of Exeter, iv. 485 ; ix. 416. Hele, its meaning, iv. 315. Hepple- white (A.), designer of furniture, x. 215. Heyford Free School, ix. 175. Highgate Archway, vi. 246. Holywell in Hunts, vi. 294. Horden (Bishop), iv. 525. Hoyt, its meaning, v. 113. Industries declining, i. 105. Italian sundial inscription, ix. 127. Karoo, South African word, iv. 330. Knife- board of an omnibus, viii. 311. Ladle, silver, iii. 474. Ladle for collecting, viii. 94. " Lanted ale," vii. 158. Laymen reading lessons in cathedrals, v. 466. Lighthouse, first British, v. 295. Little John's remains, viii. 348. Locomotive and gas, vi. 227. London churches, iv. 466 ; vii. 278. Looking- glass folk-lore, vi. 215. Lyme Regis, restoration of ecclesiastical furniture at, vi. 515. Magic ring, xi. 211. Mahogany, its derivation, viii. 352. Marriage registers, ii. 488. "Mary's Chappel," vii. 373. Mayfair marriages, v. 398. Miserere carvings, ii. 37. Money lent by measure, ii. 492 ; iii. 191. Monolith in Hyde Park, vii. 195. Motto pottery, iv. 193. Napoleon relic, iv. 72, 195. National nicknames, vii. 135. Newspaper cuttings changing colour, xi. 217. Nimmet, its meaning,