Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/221

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TENTH SERIES.


213


Pollard (H. P.) on Abbey of St. Evroult, v. 390. Buckland, Herts, rectors of, ii. 227. Chrisom, baptismal robe, viii. 377. Fanshawe inscrip- tion, v. 368. Fleetwood (Cromwell), iv. 74. Goldsborough family, v. 148 ; x. 8. Hertford- shire fonts, ix. 429. Hertfordshire iconoclast, iii. 168. Masons' marks, iii. 332. Pancake day, iii. 331. Roman bagpipers, v. 208. St. Nicholas's, Hertford, iii. 406 Pollard (H. T. ) on Emernensi Agro, ii. 518. Sands (Archbishop), x. 12. Ulidia, house motto, vii. 356 Pollard (Sir John), Speaker of House of Com- mons, his parentage, xi. 1 Pollard (Sir Lewis), his biography, xi. 365, 433,

495, 515 ; xii. 36

Pollard (M.) on Bacchanals orBag-o'-Nails, vi. 490 Becket's Martyrdom, i. 452. Desecrated fonts, ii. 112. French miniature painter, i. 137. Hertford borough seal, i. 448. Jowett and Whewell, ii. 275. London, ancient, its topo- graphy, i. 296. Lyttons at Knebworth, vii. 314. Norman inscriptions in Yorkshire, iii. 397. Porlock Church, vii. 293. St. Eloy or St. Loy at Tottenham, vi. 417. Shacklewell, iii. 353. Tooke and Halley families, viii. 37 Pollard-Urquhart (Col. F. E. R.) on Duchesse d'Angouleme, viii. 457. Bidding prayer, vii. Charles I. in Spain, iii. 236. Colenso (Bishop), iii. 251. Disraeli on Gladstone, ii. 110. Gunnings of Castle Coote, v. 395. Hurst- monceaux Castle, iv. 228. Indian sport, i. 455 James II. 's last words, xii. 258. Koepenick captain, yi. 364. Lytton (Sir Robert), iv. 455. Marriage "Service, iii. 74. Melbourne (Lord), Napoleon III. in London, ix. 372. Pole (Margaret), xi. 478. Portraits which have led to marriages, iii. 435. " Protector's Head," x. 217. Ritual question, vi. 512. St. Thomas's Day custom, iv. 527. Semi-effigies, ii. 434. Spellicans, ix. 115.

Pollard-Urquhart (Jerome) on Richard of Scot- land, ii. 450

Poll-books : Sussex, vii. 70 ; bibliography, 349, 415 ; Lincolnshire, 509 ; miscellaneous, viii. 76, 177 ; Northumberland, 453 ; Newcastle- on-Tyne, 477 ; Gloucestershire, x. 124 Polonius and Lord Burleigh, iii. 305, 416 Polony = a kind of sausage, its etymology, viii.

506 Polton (Thomas), Bishop of Worcester, 1426-

1435, iv. 347

Poltroon, derivation of the word, iv. 466 Polwhele, his ' History of Cornwall,' xii. 389 Polynesian Islands, swimming in, v. 329 Polytechnic Institution, founded 1838, v. 389,454 Pomeranian dog in Gainsborough's pictures, v.


Pomeroy : St. Martin Pomeroy, the name, x. 382,

450, 495

Pomme on Cox's orange pippins, vii. 508 Pompadour (Madame de), epigram on, i. 18 ; her

library, 445

Pompeii, photograph of labyrinth at, iv. 168 Pompelmous or pompelmoose, its etymology, iii.

168, 191, 256, 331

Pomperkin, old term for cider, vii. 187, 232 Pompey, nickname for Portsmouth, xi. 427 Pomple = trefoil, iv. 126 Ponica = gardener, slang word, its derivation, v.

346

Ponsonby (Lady Emily), her memorial, vi. 226 Ponsonby (Hon. Gerald) on General Bourke, ix. 8


Ponsonby family and Capt. Richard Elliott of

Clonmore, v. 269

Pont (Timothy), ' D.N.B.' on, ii. 324 Pontefract Castle, Easter sepulchre at, i. 265 Ponthieu (Countess of), her family, vii. 148 Pontifex family, viii. 188 " Pontificate " used as a verb, i. 404 ; ii. 173 Pontiffs, travelling, xii. 186

Pony, earliest quotation for the word, vii. 267 Pony = crib, slang use of word, vi. 185, 232, 294,

371, 434 Pook (Col. H. W.) on Blair's ' North-Country

Parish Registers,' xii. 48. Earle (John) of St..

Kitts, vi. 8. Pilkington (Richard) of Tore, vi,

188. Sharry family, v. 348. Sussex poll- books, vii. 70. ' Tyrrell's March,' xi. 246 Poole (C. L.) on brazen bijou, i. 456. Kolliwest, ii.

9 Poole (M. Ellen) on chrisom, baptismal robe, viii.

270. Knightley family, v. 313. Langley

Meynell : Sir Robert Francis, iii. 332. Mite,

a coin, viii. 454. Spellicans, ix. 115. These

are the Britons," v. 194 Poole (Rachael) on Father Sarpi's portraits, ix.

172 Poole (Thomas) of Nether Stowey, books on, x.

180 Poole (W. L.) on authors of quotations wanted,

i. 168 ; iii. 88. Battlefield sayings, iii. 35.

Camelario, Spanish term, xii. 518. Gringo :

Griengro, i. 369. Mondanit6 (Madame), ii. 149.

Phrases, seventeenth-century, iii. 371 Poonah painting, vii. 107, 232

" Poor Dog Tray," origin of the term, vi. 470, 494 " Poor Folks' Stairs," in early parish records, v.

509

Poor of London temp. Elizabeth, ix. 47 Pope, called Pater Patrum, vii. 368, 450 ; burnt

in effigy on Queen Elizabeth's Day, xii. 404 Pope Adrian IV., Nicholas Breakspear, his death,

x. 449 Pope Clement XI. and the " Gordon case," viii.

450 Pope (A.), his ' Essay on Man,' and poem by

Riickert, i. 209, 336 ; pronunciation of " tea,"

ii. 52 ; and the pronunciation of his time, v.

228, 310 ; his rendering of Homer, ii. 525 ;

epigram wrongly attributed to, viii. 487 ;

and tiger folk-lore, x. 88, 135, 358 ; on a

Shakespeare quarto, 107 ; De Quincey on, xi. 61 ;

reference to Dryden in ' Dunciad,' xii. 150 Pope (F. J.) on Hardy pedigree, v. 241. Private

library, c. Charles L, iv. 303 Pope (Samuel), his marbled paper, ii. 468 Pope (Sir William), his baby girl and James I., ix.

347 Pope Night = November 5, in America, xii. 364,

458.

Popery, tyranny, and wooden shoes," the

Englishman's antipathy, vii. 327, 393 Popery in Lancashire, c. 1574, viii. 387 Popes and slavery, xii. 349

' Pope's Head Tavern," referred to 1467, x. 206 Popjoy, etymology of the word, vii. 88, 136 Popped : " painted and popped," its meaning,

i. 407, 457 Popple (William), seventeenth-century spelling

reformer, x. 226

Population of a country parish, iv. 428, 495 Population of ancient Rome, xi. 187, 273 Porlock Church, niche in nave of, vii. 228, 293 ' Port arms," illustrations of the command, ix. 66, 116