Notes and Queries, July 27, 1912.
SUBJECT INDEX.
533
Proverbs and Phrases:
All Lombard Street to a China orange, 240
Brunt of the battle, 89, 215
Clear case, 67
Confounded red herrings, 288, 376
Credo quia impossibile, 507
Die in one's shoes or boots, 249, 377
Don't nail his ears to the pump, 428
Dutchman's anchor, 330, 435
It always rains Quaker week, 467
J'ai vu Carcassonne, 348, 473
My monkey 's up, 325
None of us infallible, 346
Nose of wax, 7
Paint the lion, 297
Pimlico order, 167, 254
Plus je connais les hommes plus j'aime les chiens, 180
Queer his pitch, 269
Riding the high horse, 15, 54, 114
Sabbath day's journey, 15
Satan rebuking sin, 330
Sleeveless errand, 445
Sol eorum successus intuetur, 366
Splendid isolation, 348, 454
Spoiling the ship for a ha'porth of tar, 468
The more the merrier, 429
Wait and see, 414
What you but see when you haven't a gun! 378
Wiltshire phrases, 326, 434, 496
You have forced me to do this willingly, 377
You may go look, 1634, 226 "Psychological." earliest use of the word, 246 Public-houses, smoking in, in seventeenth century,
188
Publishing, privilege and licence, 1534, 324 Puddyng Lane, old London street-name, 247 Punch and Judy, history of the plav, 289, 376, 477
Quakers, their Yearly Meeting, and rain, 467
Quicksilver as a charm, 468
Quilter (Harry), title of a volume of poems, 110
Quotations :
A moth-eaten rag on a moth-eaten pole, 388,
477
An endless significance lies in work, 230 And God did bless him if the prayers and
tears. 90, 154, 258 Approbation from Sir Hubert Stanley is
praise indeed, 189 As aw hurried through t' tawn t' me wark,
369
Be sober, and learn to trust, 468 Bernardus valles, colles Benedictus amabat,
209. 313
Beside my dead I knelt in prayer, 169 Bonum est nos hie esse, 209 By geometric scale, Doth take the size of pots
of ale, 290 Choked in the muddy deep I deem'd him
dead, 327 ,
Cor ad cor loquitur, 129, 237 Doubt of whatever kind can be ended by
Action alone, 230, 336, 416 Effigiem Christi dum transis pronus honora,
189
Eggs, eggs, cabbages and eggs, 210 Esse hominem tantum, 108
Quotations :
Essuyez les pieds, soufflez le nez, 329
Goliath of Gath, 389, 476
He spurns the earth with a disdainful heel, 68
.... hear the loud stag speak, 230
His life but a handbreadth, 68
Horns from Elfland faintly blowing, 69
I envy not their hap whom fortune doth
advance, 90 I shall pass through this world but once, 68,
154, 258, 289, 394 I stood beneath the tree, whose branches
shade, 325
I 've watched the actions of his daily life, 429 I was for that time lifted above earth, 90 If ever I run a horse for the Derby, 90, 154 If love were what the rose is, 449, 518 If more is needed to be known, 78, 138 Ihr Anblick giebt den Engeln Starke, 129 ; In the morning of life, work, 268, 410, 440 Intus si recte, ne labora, 129 It is like a lamprey, 230, 371 It is so with all things that man undertakes
in this world, 230, 416 Je souffre ; il est trop tard ; le monde s'est
fait vieux, 129, 372 Je suis venu trop tard dans un monde trop
vieux, 129, 372 Kiihn ist das Miihen, herrlich der Lohn, 129,
237
Last night the nightingale woke me, 449, 518 Lay myself upon the knees Of Doom, 129 Les yeux bleus vont aux cieux, 468 Like dying music, sweetest in the close, 348 Like plants in mines, which never saw the
sun, 52
Liquid ruby =wine, 230, 416 Love, as is told by the seers of old, 449 Malgre moi rinfini me tourmente, 129 Man appoints, but God can disappoint, 68, 214 Miss Buss and Miss Beale, 291, 392, 497 Morning arises stormy and pale, 36 X30e, /cat fj^fivaff' dirurreiv, 468 Nay, but as when one layeth, 268, 352 Nil' est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu,
107
O voi ch' avete gl' intelletti sani, 68 )
Oh memory ! shield me from the world s
poor strife, 230 On, Esperance, on ! 348 Perhaps if we had never met, 327, 438 Quam nihil ad geniurn, Papiniane, tuum, 9o Quanti profuit nobis haec fabula de Chnsto,
468 Quantulacunque estis, vos ego magna voco,
230
Qui fallit vino, fallit et ille fide, 52 Quid est fides ? 317 Quis Deus, incertum : est Deus, 129 Saviour of mankind, man Einanuel, 267 Secure in the last event of things, 230 Sex horis dormire sat est juvenique senique,
52
So hypochondriac fancies represent, 230 Some of your hurts you have cured, 68 Speculations should have free course, 290 Stated time is a hedge to duty, 327 Static bene fida carinis, 369, 458 Subdued to what it worked in, 129 Sur 1'Hymette j'ai eveilte les abeilles, 129 Swan which so sweetly sings, 267 Tetigisti me, et exarsi in pacem tuam, 154