Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 1.djvu/550

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542


INDEX.


> T otes and Queries, July 30, 1910.


Quotations :

Great God ! to see the golden stream, 207

He talked far above singing, 269, 316

He who first met the Highlands' swelling

blue, 88, 133 Hempseed I sow, 300 Herbe Pimpernell, I have thee found, 78 Here is no law in good green shaw, 50 Hungry Ruin had me in the wind, 109 I am tired of four walls and a ceiling, 92 I heard a little bird sing, 207 I, pete ccelestes, ubi nulla est cura, recessus, 426 If God's happiness was perfect, 408 If I may enter by some humble door, 508 If the sea-horse on the ocean, 68, 114 In his hand the thing became a trumpet, 207 In pink or purple hues arrayed, 198 In the old years past away, 149 In the still white coast at midsummer, 226 Incidis in Scyllam, 107 It 's nae joke the takin' o' a wife, 58 Jam monte potitus, 466 Justitia gaudere Deum sic collige, 149 Ka/cdp yvvaiKes' dXX' 6/twj, <2 5?;/i6rat, 68 leaping like wanton kids in pleasant spring,

269, 316 lord of oneself, uncumbered with a name,

269, 316

l<et no man value at a little price, 200 Loveing God, if I neglect my neighbour, 506 May your joy be as deep as the ocean, 248 Miss and master went to town, 43, 131, 254, 498 ^Nec minus arboribus succi genitabilis humor,

351

No redeeming vice, 150, 198 Non sibi, sed toti genitos se credere mundo,

207, 251 Nutrit ubi implunes peregrina Ciconia foetus,

351

O Charon ! halt, we pray thee, 202, 498 Oh for a deeper insight into Heaven ! 109 Old Genius the porter of them was, 269, 316 Our bodies in the sea so deep, 50 Out of my country and myself I go, 269, 317 Primus in orbe decs fecit timor, 408, 455 Princes and lords may flourish, or may fade, 467 Qui que tu sois, voici ton maitre, 137 Recte faciendo neminem timeas, 50 Religion of all sensible men, 480 Rumbling in pebble-stones, 269, 354 Seated on Elysian lawns, 68 Shine as the countenance of a priest of old,

30, 197

Talk of mountains now, 169, 237 Tantum religio potuit saudere malorum, 420 Tela praevisa minus nocent, 50, 113, 155, 216 The beautiful is vanished, 269, 317 The dark lantern of the spirit, 50, 92 The Enthusiast Fancy was a truant ever,

269, 316

The eternal crown of poesy, 50 The eternal Peter of the changeless Chair, 169 The hand that rocks the cradle, 360 The man whose Tongue before his Witt doth

runne, 506

The more' I see of men, 320 The mighty world of eye and ear, 269, 316 The tall hills Titan discovered, 50 The vine-covered hills and gay regions of

France, 269, 317

The young and the beautiful, why do they die, 149


Quotations :

Their memory liveth on your hills, 128 They who the resurrection shall attain, 109 Think of two thousand gentlemen at least, 169 Though absence part us for a while, 109 Though beaten back in many a fray, 408, 514 Three men they went a-hunting, 169 Took the world for his pillow, 368 Turba per extremas semper bacchata vagatur,

50

Two grey stones at the head and feet, 207 Wen as the captain corned for to hear on't,

68, 115

Westward ho ! with a rumbelow, 50 What a smile may procure, 468 What a speck is he dwindled into ! 269, 316 When care sleeps the soul wakes, 50 When half -gods go, 169 While soft there breathes, 68 While the eagle of Thought rides the tempest,

68, 114

Who fled full soon on the first of June, 30, 72 Who saw life steadily, and saw it whole, 169 Who will join, jolly mariners all ? 50 Wink and shut their apprehensions up,

269, 316

Winter slumbering in the open air, 468 With a gathering sound they come, 227 Within this earthly temple there 's a crowd,

207

Would Jove appoint some flower to reign, 52 Your spirit is the calmed sea, 507

R. (A. F.) on half-staff = half -mast, 264 Joy riders = reckless chauffeurs, 126 Marriage in the open air, 386 May-Day celebration at Brighton, 383 Queue in England, 486 R. (C. V.) on Public School Registers, 271 R. (D.) on S. T. Coleridge, 310

Flax Bourton, 389 R. (D. M.) on Henry Boyle, 290 R. (F. R.) on arms on silver box, 150 R. (G. E.) on Thomas Dawson Bowker, 407 R. (G. W.) on Arundel Collection sale catalogue,

368 R. (G. W. E.) on Charles Kingsley, 196

" Mother of free Parliaments," 375 R. (H.) on Public School Registers, 271 R. (J. H.) on Col. John Pigot, 349 R. (L. M.) on George IV.'s dinner-table, 63 Royal manners temp. William IV., 85 R. (L. R.) on Charles Harrison Ryall, 428 R. (S. P. Q.) on dais in mediaeval halls, 148

Guildhall statues, 208, 376

Rabelais and Butler, unfounded charge of plagiar- ism, 226

Race, three-legged or costume, its origin, 448 ' Racers Unhorsed,' satirical print, 1753, 70 Ralegh (Sir Walter), and the widow Hervye, 367 ;

and Cornish miners in Ireland, 368 Randolph (J. A.) on Starling as a Christian name,

506

' Rape of Proserpine ' and Veronese, 328, 398 Raeke, meaning of the word, 206, 416 ' Rasselas,' first Italian translation, 404, 497 Ratcliffe (T.) on bang-beggar, 393 Bible : curious statistics, 276 Coleridge on firegrate folk-lore, 415 Cuckoos to clear the mud away, 208 Eight kings : nine ladies, 328 George IV. mug, 506