Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - General Index.djvu/249

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ELEVENTH SERIES.


241


Quotations :

Led by our stars, what tracts immense we

trace ! viii. 87

Les courtisans sont des jetons, x. 88 Les femmes sont sujettes a une ferocit^

pidemique, ix. 208 Xies yeux bleus vont aux cieux, v. 468 ; vi. 56 Lesbia doth laugh to heare sellers and buyers,

ix. 206

Let no man value at a little price, i. 200 Let not thy table exceed the fourth part of

thy income, viii. 69 Xet the youngest among us remember that

he is not infallible, xi. 453 Let this be held the Farmer's Creed, iv. 6 Let us be grave, my boys ; here comes a

fool, vii. 109, 176

".Let us go hence, my songs, iii. 128, 155, 177 .L'humanite' se compose de plus de morts que

de vivants, xii. 68 ... .lie through centuries And hear the

blessed mutter of the mass, vi. 90 Life is a romance, xi. 401, 500 ; xii. 58 Like dying music, sweetest in the close, v. 348 _Like flowers in mines, that never see the sun,

iv. 469 Like plants in mines, which never saw the

sun, v. 52

Like the tall mast snapped before the storm- wind, vi. 69 Like the two Reynoldses, we have changed

sides, viii. 50, 131

!Like violets, sweetest in decay, iii. 409, 454 Linger not long ! Home is not home without

thee, vi. 389

[Liquid ruby = wine, v. 230, 416 Listen to the water-mill, all the livelong day,

vi. 489

Listen to this, all ye Arminians, ix. 88 L'ltalia fara da se, xii. 232 Xittle by little the time goes by, iii. 329, 377 Live to-day, to-morrow is not, xii. 86, 151 London Bridge is broken down, xi. 401, 461,

478 ; xii. 38, 149 Lord, in this house, ii. 509 Lord, what these weathers are cold ! ix. 270,

315

Lord of Life, all praise excelling, vi. 69 Lord of oneself, uncumbered with a name, i.

269, 316

Love, as is told by the seers of old, v. 449 Loveing God, if I neglect my neighbour, i. 506 Xympha pudica Deum vidit et erubuit, vi. 489 JM.a vie a son secret, mon ame a son mystere,

vi. 246, 334, 418, 431, 517

Madame, your countrymen are all of them

thieves, ix. 291, 335 Made perfect by the love of visible beautv, vi.

309 .Magna est veritas et (?), x. 389, 494 ; xi.

34

Malgre" moi 1'infmi me tourmente, v. 129 Man appoints, but God can disappoint, v. 68,

Man doth usurp all space, iv. 449

Man is a tool-making animal, vii. 188

!Man is immortal till his work is done, vii. 330,

373 ; viii. 136 ; ix. 36, 197

Mankind. .. .a fly on an uneven floor, xii. 10,

163


Quotations :

Man's extremity is God's opportunity, viii*

510

Many earths on earth there be, ii. 352 Marmoream me fecit, eram cum terrea,

Caesar, ii. 248

May the sun of thy life, ii. 28 May your joy be as deep as the ocean, i. 248 Measles is better than paralysis, vi. 169 Men are only boys grown tall, vii. 450, 496 Men of light and leading, viii. 170, 216 Mendacium in damnum potens, ii. 65 Mepriser 1'erreur, c'est vouloir rhomme, n'est-

il pas ? iv. 149 Methought the lone river that murmured

along, xi. 108 Midway the road of our life's term they met,

iii. 48 Miss and master went to town, i. 43, 131, 254,

498

Miss Buss and Miss Beale, v. 291, 392, 497 Miss not the occasion : by the forelock, take,

ix. 148 Mr. Metcalf ran off on meeting a cow, viii. 10,

72 More aged Christian, who has sailed thorow,

xii. 160 Morn on the waters ! and purple and bright,

iv. 468 Morning arises, stormy and pale, iv. 507 ; v.

36

Mors lilia sentibus aequat, vii. 187 Mother of Celt, and of Cymric, and Briton, xii.

140 Mourn not for Venice. Though her fall, x

387 Move swiftly, sun, and fly a lover's pace, iv.

28, 76

Multi ad sapientiam pervenire potuissent,

iv. 88, 295 Musice mentis medicina mcestse, iii. 46 ; vii.

406

My bonnie lass she smileth, vii. 168 My camp is in the West, ix. 307 My Son ! behold the tide already spent, ii.

222, 294, 416 My son is my son till he takes him a wife, x.

429, 477 f

NS0e, /ecu /u.e /X^CKT' aTrtcrreii', v. 468 va.(f) Kal jite/i^acr' airurTelv &p6pa ravra ru>v

<j>pevuv, vi. 35

Napoleon the First and Last, ii. 326 Nay, but as when one layeth, y. 268, 352 Nee licuit populis parvum te, Nile, videre, vii.

29, 115

Nee minus arboribus succi genitabilis humor,

i. 351

Needles and pins ! Needles and pins ! ii. 54 Never grow old in the streets of gold, xi. 494 Nihil tetigit quod non ornavit, x. 468 Nil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu,

v. 107

No backward path, no home (more ?) return- ing, ix. 511 No charity but amis aught values she, iii. 409,

456, 498 No curtain hides from view the spheres elysian,

xii. 160

No man can point to the exact moment when daylight merges into darkness, vii. 160