Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/321

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INDEX.
457

Fire-fork, 256, n. 2.

Fish, speculations about, 182, n. 3.

Fisher, Jasper, 363; some account of, 363, n. 2.

Fisk, the astrologer, 228; particulars respecting; 228, n. 4.

Fit, playing a, 173 and n. 4.

Fitters, 272; moaning of the word, 272, n. 1.

Flagellants, amatorial, of Spain, 166, n. 2.

Flea, its long jump, 224, n. 5.

Fleetwood, the son-in-law of Cromwell, 337 and n. 2.

Flesh is grass, 60 and n. 3.

Flies, wasps, and hornets, 54, n. 3.

Florio, and Biancafiore, 168 and n. 5.

Fludd, Robert, 26, n. 1.

Foot, the right to be put foremost, 241, n. 3.

Fop-doodle, 254 and n. 1

Ford, Mr, sermons of, 61, n. 1.

Foulis, Mr, story told by, 183, n. 5.

Fowl-catching, 210 and n. 4.

Fox, cunning of the, 258 and n. 4; weighs geese, 291, n. 5.

Franc-pledge, view of, 185 and n. 4.

Freedom, conferred by a blow, 144 and n. 1.

French goods, 294 and n. 1.

Fulham's, 160; a cant word, 160, n. 1.

Gabardine, 104; a coarse robe, or mantle, J04, n. 1.

Galen and Paracelsus, 412 and n. 3.

Galileo, observations of, 242, n. 2.

Gallows, fear of the, 357 and n. 1.

Ganzas, or geese, 245 and n. 1.

Garters, new, 304 and n. 6.

Gascoign, Sir Bernard, respited, 84, n. 3.

Gath, men of, 334.

Gazettes, 405 and n. 1.

Generation on Faith, 289 and n. 1.

Genethliacks, or Chaldeans, 240 and n. 4.

Gentee, 163 and n. 4.

Geoffrey of Monmouth, 2, n. 1.

Geomancy, 308 and n. 1.

George-à-Green, 193 and n. 4.

Gill, or girl, 201 and n. 2.

Gizards, spiritual, 355 and n. 2.

Glass, the multiplying. 280 and n. 5.

Gleaves, or swords, 349 and n. 2.

Glory and shame, 145 and n. 2.

Glow-worm, its luminous tail, 230 and n. 4.

God, a child of, 312 and n. 1.

Godwin, afterwards Bishop of Hereford, his astronomical romance, 245, n. 1.

Godwyn, Dr Thomas, 199, n. 2.

Gold and silver, marked by the sun and moon in chemistry, 153, n. 1.

Gondibert, preferred a country lass, 58 and n. 3.

Goodwin, Thomas, a Calvinistic Independent, 199 and n. 2.

Gossip, tattling, 139 and n. 1, 3.

Government, not to be upheld without the aid of poetry, 58, n. 4.

Grace, introduced by sin, 375 and n. 1.

Grandier, the curate of Loudun, 217, n. 3.

Gratiæ Ludentes, an old book, 22, n. 1.

Great cry and little wool, 37, n. 1.

Green-hastings, 263 and n. 3.

Green-men, 293 and n. 3.

Gregory VII., Pope, his insolence and ambition, 127 and n. 1.

Gresham-carts, 323 and n. 2.

Grey, Dr, suppositions of, 98, n. 4; 164, n. 2; anecdote related by, 115, n. 2; stories told by, 190, n. 1; 192, n. 2; 316, n. 5; alluded to, 195, n. 1, 3; 202, n. 5.

Grey mare the better horse, 200 and n. 5.

Grizel, patient, 72 and n. 4.

Grosted, Bob, 220 and n. 2.

Groves, cutting down of, 338 and n. 4.

Guelphs and Gibellines, 355 and n. 7.

Gunpowder plot, 382, n. 2.

Guts in 's brains, 121 and n. 2.

Guy, Earl of Warwick, 54 and n. 1.