Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/227

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NINTH SERIES.


219


Quotations :

Quadrijugis per inane Venus subvecta Columbia,

xii. 148

Quam nihil ad genium, Papiniane, tuum ! i. 148 Quern Deus vult perdere prius dementat, xii. 387 Qui faculam prsefers, Phileros, quse nil opus nobis 1

x. 218

Qui lepores agitat, verba consumit, viii. 104 Qui non modo eorum hominum qui nunc aunt,

ix. 408 Quid faculam praefers, Phileros, qua nil opua

nobia ? ix. 447 ; x. 218 Quod mortui non mordent, vii. 308 Quorum Deus vult mutare fortunam, xii. 387 Raphael paints wisdom, iv. 130 Rejoice that man is hurled, vii. 330, 398 Relic of early days ! my casual hand, x. 109 Religion of all sensible men, x. 209, 271 Remember me is all I ask, v. 210 Repent, repent, for the dear Christ's sake, xi. 48 Res nolunt diu male administrari, ii. 389 Rest is not quitting the busy career, i. 509 Restore the Heptarchy ! ii. 135 Rien ne manque a sa gloire, xi. 148 Rien rechercher, Rien rejetter, vii. 90 Rome was not built in a day, iv. 327 Said Day to Night, "I bring God's light," ii. 69,

258, 458 ; iii. 158

Say not that he did well, ix. 87, 332, 474 Scriptures out of church, xii. 429, 496 Securitas est tutiseimum bonum, xi. 466 Securus judicat orbis terrarum, iii. 268 Sed leeva in parte mamillse, x. 488 Serpentem toxicare, viii. 104 Severe and beautiful, viii. 326 Shapes of a dream, viii. 326 She of the open soul and open door, x. 47 She should never have looked at me, i. 389 ; ii. 258 She was not fair nor young, i. 429 She went into the garden, iv. 240 She who rocks the cradle. "See The hand that

rocks. Sheepskins, beeswax, putty, pitch, and plaster,

vii. 489 ; viii. 26

Ships that pass in the night, i. 1 40 ; xii. 320 Si vis pacem, para bellum, i. 129, 198 Sithence no fairy lights, x. 127 Sleep the sleep of the just, xi. 429, 475, 511 Sleep, that is death's twin brother, xii. 389 So many gods, xi. 187, 318, 394, 436 So nigh is grandeur to our dust, viii. 85, 154, 315 So odd, my country's ruin made me grave, v. 109,

219

So, when at last by slow degrees, xii. 429 Solamen miseris socios habuinse doloris ii 66

250 Some dish more sharply spiced than this, vi. 330,

399

Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, vi. 447 Sounds which address the ear are lost and die,

iv. 49

Sow a thought, reap an action, xii. 309, 377 Soyez comme 1'oiseau pose" pour un instant iii.

267, 392 Spes famse aolet, iv. 327


Quotations :

Storysa to rede ar d61it&bill, iii. 218

Stranger who wanderest through out smiling

land, iv. 188

Strenua nos exercet inertia, iv. 291 Studium sine calamo est somnium, ii. 347 Stultitiae fons est et origo, iv. 327 Such spotless honour, such ingenuous truth, xi.

87, 172, 256

Such was our fallen father's fate, viii, 325 Sumer is y-cumen in, ii. 7, 109, 176, 234, 512 Suspirat, gemit, incutitque dentes, i. 289, 378, 518 Swallows sitting on the eaves, i. 147 0apo-f (3or)6eiv iratri, ix. 268 ; x. 36 Tarda nescit molimina Spiritus Sancti gratia, vi.

106

Tales are delectable, iii. 149, 218 Tell me, ye winged winds, xii. 188, 271 Tijs fJLtv yap, &c., iii. 460 That dark inn the grave, vi. 330, 399 That fadeth not away, v. 513 That immortal lie, xi. 167, 391, 474 That one small head should carrv all he knew, v.

115

That power that kindly spread the clouda, xii. 8 That sayd, her round about she from her turnd,

i. 507; ii. 78

The beautiful is higher than the good, vi. 409 The birds awoke her with their morning aong, x.

268

The blessings he enjoys, to guard, xii. 88 The bridal is over, the guests are all gone, ii. 27 The bud on the bough, ix. 209, 372 The curse of a granted prayer, ii. 289, 397 The day this letter, iv. 69 The dreadful appetite of death, xii. 88 The easiest room in hell, i. 188 The eternal lack of pence, viii. 443 The fair Lavinia once had friends, i. 509 The feeling compass, navigation's aid. iii. 8 The first ambassador of the New World to the

Old, ix. 107, 216

The flower of beauty slumbers, xi. 88 The generations pass, the gods abide, xii. 68 The gin within the juniper, iii. 109, 218, 458, 484 The golden rood, the torch, the long procession,

vii. 510 The good of other times let other people state, ii.

27, 118 The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world,

i. 329 ; ii. 358, 458 ; vii. 420 ; viii. 176, 436 ;

xi. 460 ; xii. 440 The hearts of men which fondly here admire, iii.

469 ; iv. 98 ; viii. 85 The light that never was, vi. 160 The love-light in her eyes, ii. 69, 138 The lovely young Lavinia once had friends, ii. 78 The meanest of his creatures boasts, i. 389 The Milanese boar, semi-fleeced, vi. 210 The mill cannot grind, ix. 320 The murtherer's chain partake, xii. 88 The night was made for cooling shade, xi. 208 The nymph who bids these waters flow, iv. 28, 75 The old man clogs our earliest years, x. 268 The penalty of injustice, i. 29, 198

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