Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - General Index.djvu/254

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246


GENERAL INDEX.


Quotations :

What Hell may be I know not, ii. 28, 297 What horrid silence doth assail my ear, vn.

251, 354 What miscreant knave dares disturb the quiet

of Old Wiscard's grave ? v. 28, 137 What (mutale?) devil's taen the whigs, vh.

145, 258, 352

What will not luxury taste ? ii. 218 Whatever passes like a cloud between, viii.

249

When care sleeps the soul wakes, i. 50 When Dick the Fourth began to raigne, iv.

207

When half-gods go, i. 169 When he wanted to read a good book he

wrote one, viii. 170 When house and land are gone and spent, iii.

46S When I consider life, 'tis all a cheat, vi. 49,

116 When I lie in the cold brown earth, iv. 329,

414 When into the arms of Night sinks weary

Day, ii. 267, 334 When life as on an evil dream looks down

upon its wars, iv. 209 When little children sleep, the Virgin Mary,

xi. 189

When Nature makes a man a king, iii. 147 When she was good, iii. 128, 234, 271, 333,

438 When smiling fortune spreads her golden

ray, viii. 87 When the bold kindred, in the time long

vanish'd, viii. 406 When, the old black eagle flying, viii. 329 ;

xii. 421, 465 When thou ascended to Thy God and ours,

vii. 48, 138 When through this world of care and strife, v.

310 Whene'er with haggard eyes I view, viii. 129,

193 Wherever the Spaniards go they build a

church, xii. 68

Whether on the scaffold high, iv. 8, 58, 337 While soft there breathes, i. 68 While the eagle of Thought rides the tempest,

i. 68, 114

While you sit yawning in the kirk, x. 83 Who can withstand his angry force, ii. 408 Who dares disturb the quiet of Old Wishart's

grave, ii. 328 Who Hod full soon on the first of June, i. 30,

72 Who laughs at sin laughs at his own disease,

v. 90 ; vi. 509

Who lives in suit of armour pent, vii. 50 Who loves the light, To him the dawn shall

rise anew, xi. 321

Who saw life steadily, and saw it whole, i. 169 Who will join, jolly mariners all ? i. 50 Who's this that comes from Egypt, ii. 148 Whoever turned upon his heel to hear my

counsel, vi. 69

Whose seedfield is Time, iii. 290, 435 Whose lives are but a fragment, ii. 408 Why come not angels from the realms of glory, v. 348


Quotations :

Why come not spirits from the realms of

glory, vi. 136 Wie an dem Tag, der dich der Welt verliehen,

ix. 57 Wink and shut their apprehensions up, i.

269, 316

Winter slumbering in the open air, i. 468 Wisdom and knowledge, far from being one,

viii. 107, 158, 218

Witches meeting on Saturday night, ii. 229 With a gathering sound they come, i. 227 With patient steps the path of duty run, v.

69, 154 With pipe and book at close of day, vi. 269,

355

With words we govern men. viii. 170 Within this earthly temple there's a crowd, i.

207 Wonder, which is the seed of knowledge, iv.

28, 94 Words that a surgeon should never use,

jamais and toujovrs, xi. 453 Would Jove appoint some flower to reign, i.

52

Y ddioddeuoedd y oruy, 1627, iv. 490 Ye landlords vile, who man's peace mar, ii.

404 Yes ! fallen on times of wickedness and woe,

viii. 95

Yielding up their bacheloric ideas, xi. 69 Yonder starry sphere, ii. 388. 436 You can fool all people some time, v. 488 You had better be drown'd than to love and

to dream, vi. 269 You may fool some of the people all the time,

vi. 136 Young Never- Grow- Old, with your heart of

gold, xii. 54

Your spirit is the calmed sea, i. 507 Youth is a blunder, manhood a struggle, viii.

170

Youth will be served, viii. 8 Quotations, King's ' Classical and Foreign,' iv.

323 Quotations, Latin, in Fraunce's ' Victoria,' v.

446

Quotations in Jeremy Taylor, iv. 122 Quotations in Washington Irving's ' Sketch- Book,' iv. 109, 129, 148, 156, 196. 217, 275 ; v. 14

" Quo vadis ? " origin of the phrase, vii. 448, 497 ; viii. 34

R

R. on liverymen of London, viii. 448

11. (A.) on Lilliput in Dorsetshire, xii. 120 Mummers, v. 276 Reference wanted, vi. 238 " While " or " whilst," xii. 139

R. (A. B. E.) on authors of quotations wanted, v. 268

R. (A. F.) on Bernie (Sir Richard), ix. 369 " Capping " at Scottish Universities, iii. 386 Dispense bar, ii. 66 Early Beefsteak Club, ii. 445, 497 Elizabeth (Queen), her horses' names, iii. 346 Half-staff-half-mast, i. 264 Indian aerial post, iii. 265 Joy riders = reckless chauffeurs, i. 126 " Leap in the dark " as Par- liamentary phrase, ii. 154 Marriage in the