Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/112

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104


GENERAL INDEX.


" Foot-cloth nag," its meaning, ix. 69, 233

Foote (Robert), Westminster scholar, 1798, ix. 488

Foot-lift, its meaning, ii. 168

Footprints of pilgrims, iv. 306, 463 ; of gods, vi. 163, 223, 322, 391 ; vii. 233 ; xi. 375 ; of Mohammed, xi. 126, 238

Foot's Cray, its derivation, i. 169, 338, 474

Forage caps of the Guards, viii. 361, 427

Forbes (A.) on Dr. James Gordon Morgan, v. 88. Morgan (Sir Henry), v. 67

Forbes (Archibald), taie by, xii. 88, 134

Forbes (Duncan) and the Ferintosh distilleries, v. 28, 136

Forbes (G. S.) on Me'rimeVs ' Inconnue,' x. 509

Forbes (Dr. John), of Corse, Scottish theologian, x. 270

Forbes (J. M.) on Suwarroff and Mass6na, vii. 108

Forbes-Mosse (J.) on Rev. William Mosse, viii. 185

Forbin (Comte de), his memoirs, xi. 27

Ford (C. L.) on " Ama nesciri" and the Archbishop of Armagh's war poem, vi. 101. Anagrams, ix.

jfc. 135. Anecdote, i. 512. " Another to," v. 256.

'Apology for Cathedral Service,' iv. 523; v. 138. "Are we better?" iii. 293. Arrived, ix. 487. Authors wanted, viii. 89. Bissona, vi. 476. Books and bookmen, their future, v. 216. Browning and Seneca, v. 167. Byrorn (John), his epigram, ix. 138. Byroniana, v. 43, 205, 262. Campbell (Thomas), his ' Wallace,' iii. 393. Campbell and Keats, resemblance between, v. 86. Charles V. on different European tongues, ix. 152. Chest, old wooden, v. 196. Choriasmus and chiasmus, ii. 74. Coleridge (Hartley), i. 385. Comparisons are odious, v. 195. Cooper (Gilbert), ii. 218. Cyclops, v. 238. D'Aulnoy (Comtesse) and the microphone, iii. 397. " Different than," x. 391. Earthquake in 1750, iii. 331. Edward II., life of, iv. 9. English grammar, i. 433. English rimes to foreign words, iii. 437. Fashion in language, x. 337. Glowworm and fire- flies, x. 365. "God's first creature, which was light," iv. 462. "Grave of great reputations," v. 156. Gray (Thomas), his ' Elegy,' iii. 375. ' Hail, Queen of Heaven,' Catholic hymn, v. 154. Hebrews ix. 27, iii. 415. Herbert (G.), 'Jacula Prudentum,' v. 108; his ' Flower,' ix. 228. Historic parallel, vi. 286. Hood (Thomas), his 'Last Man, iv. 534. Hymn, ii. 495. 'In Memoriam,' liv., i.

110. Information and General Knowledge Office,

111. 433. " Island of the innocent," iv. 232. " J'ai v&u," vii. 105. " JudaeusApella,"iii. 495. Landor (W. S.), v. 456. Latin ambiguities, ii. 14. Latin motto, vii. 478. 'Lost Pleiad,' vi. 274. Lucretius xii. 92. Lytton (Lord) and Ibn Ezra, iii. 352


Macaulay (Lord), his 'Ivry,' i. 306; and iv. 263. 'Horatius,' v. 413. Mill (John Stuart) his definition of matter, vi. 228. Milton (John) anc the North, ii. 55. Misericordia : Franciscans, i 456. Monosyllables in literary composition, ix 477. Montaigne, Florio's translation, iii. 7; hi verdict on himself, iii. 174. Mutual Admiratioi Society, iv. 417. " .Nil actum," v. 106. Non jurors, iii. 418. Nouns of singularity, iv. 53. " ( could my mind," xi. 169. "Owl in ivy bush, vi. 397. Owl-light, xii. 511. Oxford, expul sions from, iv. 34. Penn (William), i. 50


Personate = resound, ii. 131. Philip II. of Spain, i. 74. Pin pictures, x. 375. Poem attributed to Milton, vi. 182. Porter's lodge, i. 112. " Pros- picimus modo," ix. 34. Rogers's ' Ginevra,' v. 3, 505. St. Christopher, viii. 335. " Save the face of," vi. 398. Scott (Sir Walter), Greek epigram, iii. 434 ; iv. 134. Shakespeare and Cicero, v. 463. Shakespeariana, i. 422 ; vi. 5. Sheridan (R. B.) and Dundas, ii. 274. 'Soul's Errand,' x. 150. Spiera (F.), his despair, ix. 491. Stream of ten- dency, ix. 172. Subjunctive, imperfect, iii. 136. Suwarroff and Masse'na, vii. 192. Tennyson (Lord), his * Ancient Sage,' iii. 376. Tennysoniana, ii. 461. "Terra filius," iv. 137. That, elliptical use of, iv. 176, 349. "To the bitter end," vi. 346. " Tour, aerial," iii. 316. " Tring, Wing, Ivinghoe," iv. 112. Up, use of the word, v. 326. , Vicissitudes of language, xi. 314. Waller, iv. 11 ; vii. 55. Wesley (Charles), George Lillo, and John Home, viii. 492. Wesley (John), ii. 55. " What do they call you ? " iii. 244. " What has posterity done for us?" x. 415. "Will ye go and marry, Katie," ii. 518. Wordsworth (W.), and Scott, iii. 114 ; line in 4 Michael,' 151 ; his ' Excursion,' v. 68 ; and Keats, x. 398. Wordsworthiana, iv. 321, 342 Ford (M.) on Lord John Russell and the Alabama,

xii. 49

Ford Abbey and Blakemore estate, iv. 519 Ford family of Bagtor and Ember Court, iv. 128, 274 "forecourt at Ashburnham House, Westminster, vii.

125

foreign arms in England, iii. 308, 361, 372 Foreign Courts and Foreign Homes,' notes on, iii.

247, 398

foreign languages, their study, i. 261 foreign words, English rimes to, iii. 287, 436 foreigners in Mexico, their designations, vii. 389, 496 ;

viii. 21, 130, 210 foresteal : forestall, introduction of the word, xii. 287,

371 Fork and knife crossed, ix. 14, 357; x. 74, 254 ; xi.

156 Forlong (Major-General J. G. R.), his biography, viii.

365, 407

Forlong (J. G. R.) on Capt. Gordon and the Lancas- ter guns at Sebastopol, viii. 452 Forlong (N. R.) on Forlong, viii. 407 Form of intercession : War in South Africa, v. 184 Forman (Anthony), name inscribed on sundial, xi. 8 Forman (M. B.) on quotations in Green's ' Short History of the English People,' vi. 114. " Where'er you walk," vi. 318 Forrep-land= assart-land, ii. 487 Forrest (G.) on portraits of officers, viii. 123 Forshaw (A.) on Seasalter, ix. 417 Forshaw (C. F.) on animals in people' s insides, viii. 90 ; xii. 414. Beardshaw or Bearde-shawe, vii. 137. Bedell family, iii. 474; iv. 75. Blaisdell family, iv. 55. Branstill Castle, xi. 14. Bridge chantry in West Riding, xii. 217. Burns, in praise of, ix. 374. Carson family, xii. 110, 331. Cerebos, v. 440. Chavasse family, vii. 130. Crabs' eyes as medicine, v. 356. Cullen (W. H.), xii. 236. Dairy windows, xi. 155. * Dictionary of Greek Mythology,' x. 176. Doctor as a Christian


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