TENTH SERIES.
233
Quotations :
We shall meet, we know not where, v. 248
We shall see them, x. 68
We that are held of you in narrow chains,
ix. 29 We think at first that home is heaven, viii.
251 We think so because all other people think so,
vii. 176
Weel, it disna matter mickle, vii. 113 Weep not for those departed, xi. 248, 316 Well of English undefyled, ix. 267 What dire offence from am'rous causes
springs, xi. 32, 56
What scenes have passed since first, xii. 388 What songs the Syrens sang, ix. 484 What thing is Love ? ix. 341 What will ye with them, earthly men, viii.
450 ; ix. 175 Whate'er in her horizon doth appear, vii. 309,
374
When as King Henry rul'd this land, xii. 209 When Byron died we held our breath, vii. 208 When danger's rife, iv. 440 When griping grief the heart doth wound,
vii. 498
When I gazed into those stars, xii. 448, 495 When I left thy shores, O Naxos, ix. 29 When in doubt don't, iv. 408 When late I attempted your pity to move,
vii. 460 When love unites, wide space divides in vain,
v. 48 When our old Catholic fathers lived, iii. 109,
176 When Shakespear, Beaumont, Fletcher, vii.
247 When she was good, she was very, very good,
ii. 528 When tyrants kiss 'tis time to fear, x. 348,
397 When we poor middies are pacing the deck,
vii. 489
When with society he's in the lurch, ix. 29 W'en you see a man in woe, xii. 46 Where his cathedral huge and vast, viii. 230 Where love is, there comes sorrow, vi. 89 W T here the Radcliffe, alas ! rules no more,
v. 208
Where the wild hare kindles, viii. 109, 153 Whereas by you I have been driven, vii.
166
Whereas we've rescued you, ingrate, vii. 166 Wherever God erects a house of prayer, ix.
187, 255 While with your Dodington retir'd you sit,
xii. 462 Who does not venerate the chief of that
illustrious family, vii. 448, 514 Who God-like clasps the triple forks, vii. 428,
493
Who has a voice like thine, v. 108 Who lights the faggot ? not the full faith,
iv. 10
Who plucked this flower ? i. 200 Who see a pin and pick it up, vii. 496 W T ho shall decide when doctors disagree, vii.
220
Who when she died, like Flora fair, x. 68 Whom have I known that I remember best ?
x. 168 Whose changing mound and foam, ii. 9
Quotations :
Whose nice discernment, Virgil like, ix. 110,
168 Whose part in all the pomp that fills, iv. 529 ;
y. 92
W T ill your pulse quicken ? ii. 388 William the Conqueror ten sixty-six, x. 228 Winding 'neath rocks impending, vii. 309 Winter makes ready for the spring, ix. 390 With a heart of furious fancies, iv. 68, 134 With equal good nature, good grace, and
good looks, ix. 488 ; x. 55 With kind confiding eyes raised up, iv. 509 With mind unwearied still will I engage, ii. 308 With new-fallen dew, xii. 109 With peaceful mind the path of duty run,
viii. 169
With viewless steps the bearers pass, v. 208 Woe to the coward that ever, viii. 230, 273 Woman with the West in her eyes, xi. 328 Words may be as angels, iv. 127 Write me as one who loves his fellow-men,
iii. 480 Ye couples, who meet under love's smiling
star, xii. 226 Ye high and low flyers of all ranks, attend,
xii. 106 Ye shepherds, tell me, have you seen, ix. 29,
77 Years hence, when eyes now blind with tears ,
vi. 349 Yet all these were, when no man, iv. 468,
513 Yet, Freedom ! Yet thy banner, torn, but
flying, i. 168
Yet this is sure : the loveliest star, xi. 9 Yet this shall I ne'er know, viii. 37 Yet who would stop, or fear to advance,
x. 129, 173 You may trust him, for he is a frugal man,
vii. 309
You say I'm dead, I say you lie, v. 210 You say they all have passed away, vi. 209,
296 Your kindness is too much for speaking, ix.
249 Quotations, seventeenth-century, x. 127
R
R. on Biset (Margaret), ii. 71. Burton's ' Scented Garden,' vii. 449. Cumberland Hearth Tax Lists, xii. 269. Cumberland Train Bands, xii. 269. Old tunes, x. 138. Roses of Gibral- tar, vii. 390. Tuesday Night's Club, xi. 455
R n on " vendium," v. 148
R y on Sir James Edwards, vi. 230
R. (A. B. E.) on Scott's ' Quentin Durward,' vii. 508
R. (A. F.) on arms of Pope Pius X., i. 309. Child executed for witchcraft, iii. 468. Crumps- man : moonsman, viii. 49. Dollars : bits : picayune, viii. 115. Edward VII. (King), and motor-car, iv. 7. Female auctioneers, vii. 206. Fife-boy, viii. 127. Hampstead omnibus, viii. 86, 396. Hornby and Feilden, M.P.'s, v. 326. Link with the past, ii. 286. " Monmouth Street of literature," iii. 188. Newspaper editions, iii. 287 ; viii. 117. Rail- way travelling reminiscences, xii. 35. Shake- speare (Thomas), ix. 107. Signs of affirma- tion and dissent, viii. 205. Spongeitis, iv. 347.