ELEVENTH SERIES.
271
Dog poems, ii. 395 Dummie-daws, ii. 455
D'Urfey and Allan Ramsay, iv. 58 English
clocks in Pontevedra Museum, ii. 338
Gamnecourt in Picardy, ii. 512 ; iii. 112
GefEery le Bakester de Lofflthe, iii. 372 Gow
(Neil), race-horse, i. 376 ' Hamlet ' in 1585,
iii. 474 Haviland (John), printer, ii. 477
Hereford. Archdeacons of, ii. 255 Holmes
(Alexander), 1848, iii. 173 Knights of Malta
in Sussex ii. 457 Knights of the Swan, ii. 470
Lum : origin of the surname, ii. 376 Luscombe
(Bishop Michael H. T.), ii. 456 Macaulay's
allusipns, iii. 278 ; his ancestry, iv. 33
Milton in Ireland, iii. 453 Monastic sites and
buried treasure, ii. 516 Newton (Isaac) and
his namesake, v. 295 Ogilvie (Rev. Dr.), iv.
494" Paint the lion," v. 297 Pastrana (Miss),
iii. 94 Pauper's badge, iii. 55 Peters (Father)
and Queen Mary, ii. 198 Pottinger or Porringer
(Capt.), ii. 315 Quaker oats, iii. 75 Querard
(J. M.), bibliographer, ii. 178 Rags left at
wells, iii. 470 " Rebecca and her Daughters,"
iii. 195 Riddle of claret, iii. 76 Royal arms in
churches, ii. 514 St. Agatha at Wimborne, ii.
112 Scissors and jaws, ii. 497 Scupper, the
verb, ii. 298 Shakespeare Quartos in Switzer-
land, ii. 353 Sheeny, nickname for a Jew, ii.
476 Siege of Derry : Rev. James Gordon, iii.
457 Siligo : sprig : beckab : draget, iii. 233
Smith (Goldwin), his ' Reminiscences,' ii. 277
Smith (Sydney) and " Boreal Bourdaloue," ii.
473 Songs of the peasantry, iii. 334
Sparrow-blasted, ii. 392 Stair divorce, 1820,
iii. 74 Staple in place-names, ii. 252 Swam-
merdam's ' History of Insects,' iv. 18 Tenny-
son's ' Margaret,' ii. 94 Twins and second
Bight, iv. 54 Wet hay, ii. 535; iii. 114
Women carrying their husbands, ii. 452
Wooden effigies at Weston-under-Lizard, ii. 356
'Scourge,' 1752, epitaphs from, xii. 28, 107
Scout spy, sneak, early use of the word, iii. 165
Scouts of the Army and fleur-de-lis, x. 51
Scribble, earliest use of the verb, i. 447, 494 ; ii.
79 Scrivener (S.), Westminster scholar, c. io30, x.
428
Scrutator on adders' fat as cure for deafness, iii. 69 Scruto, etymology of the word, ii. 187 Sculptors, Gothic mason -sculp tors of 13th century,
x. 331, 372, 417 Sculpture, top-hat and bowler in, v. 146, 233, 295,
334
Sculptures captured at Vigo, exhibition of, i. 347 "Scummer "=ship, temp. Edward III., xi. 398,
460
Scupper, verbal use of the word, ii. 207, 298 Scurr family of Malton, Yorkshire, v. 50 Scutari, Gordon House, origin of the name, iv. 210 Scythian on Albertus a Lasco, iii. 149 Sea, its colour, i. 446 ; longevity on the borders
of the, v. 330
Seabury (Bishop S.), his ancestors, vi. 68 " Sea-divinity," equivalent to maritime ethics,
xi. 207
Seal, 1362, its legend and origin, x. 29 Seal, crest on, man's head with a cap, x'i. 48, 267 Seal, Elizabethan, 1591, armorial device on, iv. 90' Seal, ivory, found in New Guinea, vi. 469 Seal belonging to a Nottingham banker, vii. 489 Seal found at Dover : Spalding Priory, i. 408 Seal of Giggleswick School, v. 68, 139
Seal of president of a. religious body, ix. 249
Seal of the Abbot of Ramsay, c. 1240, xii. 260
Seal with arms, Argent, a cross gules, vi. 49, 97
Seal with crest and " S. M-," 18th-century, iv. 90
Sealer, duties of Chancellor's sealer, vi. 89
Seals, artist-engravers of, in England, c. 1820, x,
269 Seals of Thomas, Marquis of Dorset, vi. 330 ; vii.
18
Seamanship, daring feats of, x. 444, 507, 514 Searaucke (T.), Cambridge graduate, 1678, vii. 50 Sea songs, i. 110
Sea-trumpet, meanings of the word, xii. 260 Seaton (D. B.) on Swammerdam's ' History of
Insects,' iii. 448 Seaton (M.) on bird quotations, iii. 69 ; Swallow
in Greek carol, 69 Seaver (G.) on Seaver, viii. 229 ; Sever of London
and " Ye Olde Harpe," 267 ; Sever of Merton,
181, 297
Seaver family, viii. 229 ; ix. 216 Seaview on arithmetic among the Romans, v. 108 Seaward (G. S.) on knighthood, ii. 328 Second Chamber, author of the phrase, i. 209, 296 Second sight, twins' power of, iii. 469 ; iv. 54 r
156, 259, 299, 379 Secretaries to the Lords Lieutenant of Ireland,
ii. 187, 233 Secretary on Handel's ' Harmonious Blacksmith,
x. 294 " Secretary at War," cannon inscription, Margate,
ix. 326/374, 415 Secret service, from accounts, 1794-1829, vi. 370,
430, 460 ; vii. 17 Secular = aged, "secular trees," early use of the
word, iii. 207 " Secure arms, "meaning of the military phrase, in.
346
Sedan-chair carriers, the last, i. 167 Seddon (T. &G.) furniture manufacturers, c. 1840 ,
ix. 86, 157
Sedley (Catherine) and the Churchill family, v. 47 " Sedulous ape," origin of the phrase, iii. 207 Seekers, religious sect, its history, iii. 207, 255 Seeley & Co. on 'Church Historians of Englard,
iii. '373 " Seen through glass " as legal evidence, viii. 230,
252, 294, 331, 380
Seersucker coat, origin of the word, ii. 69, 138 Sefton = carriage, origin of the word, iii. 447, 498 Sefton (William), maker of earthenware tomb- stone, i. 189, 255, 312, 356, 409, 454 Segar (M. G.) on Ambrose philips, xi. 321 Segrave family, origin of, vi. 271, 374 Segr6 near Angers, and the Segrave family, vi. 271 ,
374
Segundo, meaning of the word, iii. 347, 395 Selby. Yorks, Peculiar Court and parish registers, i.
37, 97 ; v. 372, 438
Seldam in Cheapside, origin of the name, xii. 421 Selden (John), 1584-1654, "force " in his 'Table
Talk,' iv. 229, 278, 495 " Selflst," use of the word, iv. 267 Selkirk family, v. 109, 236, 375 Sellers (E. Jaquett) on Walter Fen wick ; Magda- lene Hunt, ix. 330 Sellers (H.) on authors wanted, xii. 48 ; George
Herbert and ' The Return from Parnassus,' x.
487 ; Reference to ' Chevy Chase,' 106
Selling of a horse," meaning of the phrase, vu
328, 496