Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 7.djvu/657

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Notes and Queries, July 27, 1907.


INDEX.


543


Quotations :

Omuia incommoda suo iure bona vocabuntur, 176

Once, we confess, beneath the patriot's cloak, 237

One impulse from a vernal wood, 28

Patience and gentleness are power, 208

People to be avoided or cultivated, 130, 175

Perchance from Salem's holier fields return'd, 213

Plato, that plank from the wreck, 208

Popery, tyranny, and wooden shoes, 327, 393

Posui Deum adjutorem meum, 29, 78

Quae venit indigno poena, 228, 274

Quhen to Makferland, wicht and bauld, 231

Radnorshire, Radnorshire, 205

Read the Rede of this Old Roof Tree, 314

Rest thee on this mossy pillow, 208

Robin promis'd me, 231

Sabina saw, but would not see, 69

Sardana, le preux chevalier, 509

She let the legions thunder past, 428

Ships that pass in the night, 200

Silenus, old drunken Silenus, 448

Since all our lives long we travel towards, 266

So passeth in the passing of the day, 208, 254

Some say the age of chivalry is gone, 169, 217

Spartam nactus es, hanc exorna, 105

Speak, History, who are life's victors ? 328

Steal not this book, my friend, 212

Straight is the line of duty, 140

Supine in Sylvia's snowy arms he lies, 309

Tears are the oldest and the commonest, 309, 374

The first crowned head that enters Lincoln's

walls, 75

The hand that rocks the cradle, 140 The heart two chambers hath, 489 The maiden's delight, 35 The snowclad yew tree stirred with pain, 208 The tombs of Macleod and Maclean, 149 The words of the tragedian, Jam mansueta mala

293

Their visnomies seemed like a goodly banner, 228 There dwells the scorn of vice and pity too, 309 There is a sweetness in autumnal days, 12 They mistook the end and overrated the force oi

Government, 389, 453

They say that war is hell, a thing accurst, 269, 312 Tho' nature, red in tooth and claw, 40 Though outwardly a gloomy shroud, 35 Though with pistols 'tis the fashion, 448 Thy brandished whynyard all the world defies, 309 Till down he fell, yet falling fought, 426 Timidi nunquam statuerunt tropseum, 49, 158 Tire le rideau, la farce est jou6e, 266 'Tis only in the land of fairy dreams, 309 To an exact perfection they have brought, 309 To-day, too, you hindered the cook, 426 To me the meanest flower that blows, 28 To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, 356 Toujours me"content de ce qu'il vient de faire

448, 493

Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner, 400 TJbi rudentes stridunt, 337 Un gros serpent mordit Aurele, 246, 297 Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, 55, 436 Vir bonus es, doctus, prudens, 228 Walking in style by the banks of the Nile, 508 We grow up at random, 309


Quotations :

We mortals cross the ocean of this world, 208, 254 We possess an aristocracy the most democratic,

428, 493

We think so because all other people think so, 176 Weel, it disna matter mickle, 113 Whate'er in her horizon doth appear, 309, 374 When Byron died we held our breath, 208 When griping grief the heart doth wound, 498 When late I attempted your pity to move, 460 When Shakespear, Beaumont, Fletcher, 247 When we poor middies are pacing the deck, 489 Whereas by you I have been driven, 166 Whereas we've rescued you, ingrate, 166 Who does not venerate the chief of that illustrious

family, 448, 514

Who God-like clasps the triple forks, 428, 493 Who see a pin and pick it up, 496 Who shall decide when doctors disagree, 220 Winding 'neath rocks impending, 309 You may trust him, for he is a frugal man, 309 R. on Burton's 'Scented Garden,' 449

Roses of Gibraltar, 390 R. (A. B. E.) on Scott's 'Quentin Durward,' 508 R. (A. F.) on female auctioneers, 206 R. (D. M.) on mysteries of the Embo baronetcy, 315 R e (J.) on Roscoe arms and family, 328 R. (H.) on Cambridge booksellers and printers, 26 R. (I.) on picture of lady in red, 129 R. (M. A.) on Masonry and religion, 467 Racedham on William Seaton, 446 Radcliffe (J.) on treats: mullers, 517 Radford (G. H.) on ' The Confinement : a Poem,' 368 Radnorshire rime, 205 Rain and lunar halo, 193, 355 Raja-i-Rajgan, Indian title, 66 Ramsammy, a drunken spree, 407, 473 Ranee (A. K.) on a musical family : Dr. Jay, 293 Randolph (J. A.) on religious houses of Sussex, 415 Ratcliffe (T.) on bossmg, 135 ' Christmas Boys,' 31 Churchyard cough, 7 Cubbardy, its meaning, 287 Flint and steel, 396 Forwhy, its meaning, 375 Hammals, its meaning, 353 " Lead his own horse," 367 Life-star folk-lore, 196 Mansfield Gooseberry- Tart Fair, 476 Matches in Congreve, 451 Pincushions, 496 Pins, crooked, 496 Pot-hooks and hangers, 432 Shadow-catcher = photographer, 158 Spring-heeled Jack, 394 Step-dances, 378 " Taping shoos," 259 Three-candle folk-lore, 54 Twilt : quilt, 244 "Waxandcurnels,"267,497 Wound, its pronunciation, 391 Rauthmel (Rev. R.), curate of Whitewell, 8, 115 Read (F. W.) on Public Office = Police Office, 90 Reade (A. L.) on " Prince " Boothby, 405 Fleetwood of Penwortham, 474 Russell (Sir William Howard), 465