-90
GENERAL INDEX.
Devil and the lawyer, old tale, v. 290
Jtt Devil owed him a service," saying 1580, vi. 169
Deville, phrenologist, his bust of Rowland Hill,
iii. 226 Devis (A. W.), his painting of Queen Elizabeth and
Walsingham, ix. 288 Devon, North Devon words c. 1600, their meaning,
iv. 449, 518
'.Devon, South, Weston Mouth in, ii. 369 Devon memorials of the Revolution, 1688-90, v.
147
Devonia on SS. Prothus and Hyacinthus, ii. 528 Devonian on builders in Devonshire, ii. 310 Devonshire, names of builders in, 1812-30, ii.
310, 418
Devonshire marriage custom, i. 485 Devonshire Regiment, historical records, i. 35, 75 Devonshire schools, pupils of, vi. 270, 358 Dew (G. J.) on mourning letter-paper and black- bordered title-pages, x. 455 ; twelve good rules, vii. 509
" Dew Drop Inn," in various localities, i. 246, 355 De Witt (Cornelius), murdered 1672, his descend- ants, ii. .
Dew-ponds, observations on, i. 253 Dhai (Clan) on Queen Elizabeth and Walsingham :
painting by Devis, ix. 288 D'Herwart (M.) at Berne in 1750, i. 267, 336 Dhona, Dona, or Done, 1643, his title, viii. 269,
355
D'Huxattime. See Hitxaitime. ' Diaboliad,' by W. Combe, ladies satirized in, ii.
147 Dialect, almanacs published in, v. 390, 494 ; vi.
235 Dialect of Warwickshire, Shakespeare's use of,
ix. 288, 337, 376, 394 Dialect words of Rochdale, c. 1850, xi. 295, 403,
496 ' Dialogues of the Dead ' in ' Once a Week,' i.
8, 75
" Diamond cut diamond," 1604, ix. 227 Diaries, earliest use of, vii. 109 ; ix. 414 Diaries, English mathematical, i. 147 ; iii. 252 Diatoric teeth, derivation of the word, iv. 290,
395, 459
Dibdin (Charles), d. 1814, commemoration in Southampton, xi. 41, 98 ; his Helicon Theatre x. 389 ; xi. 480 ; edition of his songs, c. 1839, xii. 47 ; his ' The Shepherdess of the Alps,' 1780, ix. 68 ; his ballad opera ' The Waterman,' 1774, vii. 50, 96
.Dibdin (E. Rimbault) on Anderson (Sophie), x. 168 Austen's (Jane), ii. 439 Authors of quota- tions wanted, xi. 430 Avanzino or Avanzini, x. 370 Comet, date of, xii. 186 Crosstree : Tom Bowling, ii. 432 Dibdin bibliography, xii. 471 ; and Southampton, xi. 41 ' Geat Historical Pictures of the Siege of Acre,' vii. 227 ' Man- chester Marine,' x. 117 " Scots "=" Scotch," xi. 157 Serres (R.), xi. 342' Shepherdess of the Alps,' ix. 68 Smith (Father), the organ builder, ii. 515 Dibdin (T.), his ' Manchester Marine,' 1793,.x. 49,
Diccell (Sir Robert), mentioned in will, 1592, xi.
170 Dick (B.), his painting ' Summer Morning on the
Thames,' 1875, ix. 410 ~Dick (Dr. W.) of Tullymet, his parentage, viii.
168 ; ix. 37
Dickens (C.), continuations of ' Edwin Drood,'
i. 69, 153, 394; and plant-names, 76, 459; on
Thomas Traddles, law student, 288 ; hangman
in ' Barnaby Rudge,' 465 ; Royal Humane
Society, ii. 87, 194 ; ' Oliver Twist ' -on the
stage, 129, 191, 215, 234 ; ' Haunted Man and
.the Ghost's Bargain,' 186 ; Queries from
' Pickwick,' iii. 68 ; " Shallaballah " in ' Old
Curiosity Shop.' 68, 111, 153, 231 ; Boz and
Dombey as French place-names, 244 ; " Popy-
lorum tibi " in Nicholas Nickleby,' 244, 313,
392, 453 ; obscure expressions in ' Pickwick,'
267, 313, 332, 392 ; contemporary review of
' Edwin Drood,' 307, 472 ; suppressions in
' Pickwick,' 392, 453 ; his Mantalini and W. M.
Thackeray, iv. 47, 153, 258 ; emendation in
' Hamlet, 84 ; Miss Bolo in ' Pickwick,' 89, 158,
366 ; Eatanswill newspapers in ' Pickwick,'
146 ; ' Pickwick,' errors in first edition, 248,
292, 352 ; his allusion to song ' Old Clem,' 289,
354, 415 ; and the inscribed stone, 443 ; Capt.
Cuttle's hook, 506 ; his phrase " United States
security," 508 ; Centenary notice, v. 81, 101,
121, 141, 161, 182, 203, 223, 243, 262, 284, 301,
323, 344, 362, 383, 404, 421, 442, 461, 470;
unpublished letters to G. W. Rusden, 86 ; his
railway accident, 1865, 263, 470 ; and E. M.
Stanton, 344, 452 ; and Dissenters, 461, 511 ;
toy- book of his characters, 5 ; Capt. Cuttle's
hook, 52 ; Charitable Grinders in ' Dombey
and Son,' 66 ; Mr. Lowten in ' Pickwick
Papers,' 66 ; ' Dombey and Son,' reference
to Arabian story in, 88 ; Lord George
Gordon in ' Barnaby Rudge,' 88, 210 ; Mr.
Magnus's spectacles, 106, 178 ; knockers for
bedroom doors, 111 ; the phrase " United
States security, 115, 233 ; early reference to
' Pickwick,' 265 ; playhouses, American and
British, 327 ; ' No Thoroughfare,' Webster or
Fechter, o63, 414, 452 ; his last reading at Leeds
1869, vi. 87 ; Fagin in ' Oliver Twist,' 486 ;
' The Mystery of Edwin Drood,' vii. 66, 80, 362 ;
places mentioned in ' The Uncommercial
Traveller,' 249, 434 ; memorial in Kent, 305,
378 ; buildings associated with, at Birming-
ham, 325, 432, 510 ; " cocks' heads " in ' The
Chimes,' 328, 416 ; death of the original of ' Little
Dorrit,' 505 ; Dothebys Hall anticipated, viii. 3 ;
places mentioned in ' The Uncommercial
Traveller,' 13, 94; "The Crooked Billet" in
' Barnaby Rudge,' 50, 116; St. George's Gallery
mentioned by, 94 ; Col. Gordon in ' Barnabv
Rudge,' 251 ; picture-cards in ' Pickwick,' 408,
471 ; his bobby of exploring London streets, ix.
9, 58, 92 ; Dr. Dundey in ' The Detective
Police,' 48 ; picture-cards in ' Pickwick,' 56 ;
his speech at a festival of the Royal Society of
Musicians, 85 ; " Sydney Carton " at Old
Shrewsbury School, 149, 213 ; places mentioned
by, 169, 257; errors in first edition of 'Pick-
wick,' x. 153 ; and Yarmouth pottery, 286 ;
and wooden legs, 409, 454, 493 ; early allusions
to ' Pickwick,' 487 ; and wooden legs, xi. 37 ;
his ' David Copperfield ' dramatized, 106 ; a
photograph of, 211 ; Miss Twinkleton's speech
in ' Edwin Drood,' 492 ; " white-headed boy "
in ' The Old Curiosity Shop,' xii. 478
Dickensian on ' Nicholas Nickleby ' ! suppressions in ' Pickwick,' iii. 453
Dickinson (H. W.) on Carisbrooke Castle, I.W. : water wheel, vii. 269 Cartwright (E.), vii. 435