Notes and Queries, Jan. 25, 1913. SUBJECT INDEX.
533
Proverbs and Phrases:
The devil owed him a service, 169
The more the merrier, 15
Tom, Dick, and Harry, 268
Tool the reins, 487
Wiltshire phrases, 36 Psalms in metre, their use, 229 Ptolemy (Claudius), quoted by Sir T. Browne,
30, 97
Puddynglane, London, note on, 1297, 6 Pulpit, Ulster, built on a rock, 266 Punishment, corporal, books on, 70 Purdue family, 249
Purdue or Purdy (W.), bell-founder, c. 1567, 249 ' Puss in Pattens,' print, 1782, 489 Puteolana (Maria), maiden warrior, 288 Pyke, Fullwood, Halley, and Parry families, 303.
415, 497 Pyke, Stewart, Freeman, and Day families, 25*
Quarles family, 70, 153, 197
Quatrain, " On parent knees," the Persian original of, 21
Quotations :
A man may commit a mistake, 48, 118
A soul supreme, in each hard instance tried, 89, 155
A temple whose transepts are measured bv miles, S68, 414
America remained Carlyle's Carcassonne, 489
An Austrian army awfully arrayed, 480
Ancestral masks, each in its little cedarn chest, 309, 434
And hears the unexpressive nuptial song, 328, 395, 476
And now my vacation is over, 468
As I whirl and whirl, 429
Be thou happy, be thou kind, 11
Bide thy time, 189, 313
Bite again, and bite bigger, 17, 94
Cows, women, sheep, dogs, and other demo- crats, 169, 256
Divine discontent, 229
Dreams of Lipara, 489
E'en as he trod that day to God, 429, 494 i Everything he did became him best, 189
For the good saint little knew, 11, 97
Forth from England's ranks a score of horse- men, 69
God gives the birds food, but does not throw it into their nests, 410
He that doeth a base thing in zeal for a friend, 48, 118
He that dreamed that he saw his father, 489
He whose ear is untaught, 509
Heu quanto minus est cum reliquis versari quam tui meminisse, 29, 95
His cibus et potus siniul est, 227
If thou wouldst have all about thee like the colours of some fresh picture, 309
In subjection to women he learnt the govern- ance of men, 189
Incidis in Scyllam cupiens vitare Charybdin, 227, 312
Je m'aime assez quand je me considere, 250
Jugulantur homines ne nihil agatur, 489
Last night the nightingale woke me, 172
Quotations :
Les yeux bleus vont aux cieux, 56
....lie through centuries And hear the
blessed mutter of the mass, 90 Like the tall mast snapped before the storm- wind, 69 Linger not long I Home is not home without
thee, 389 Listen to the water-mill, all the livelong dav,
489
Lord of Life, all praise excelling, 69 Lympha pudica Deum vidit et erubuit, 489 Ma vie a son secret, mon ame a son myst<>iv.
246, 334, 418, 431, 517
Made perfect by the love of visible beauty, 30! Measles is better than paralysis, 169 va.<(> Kol /u^/ivew* diriffTflv Apdpa ravra TUV
tfiptvuv, 35 Nor custom, nor example, nor vast numbers,
48, 189, 238
Nor strive to wind one's soul too high, 109 Nulla non donanda lauru, 370, 418 O quantum nobis profuit ilia fabula de
Christo, 36
O stout North- Easter, 69, 172 One ship drives East, and one drives West, 330 Own large father-like heart, 189 Ply thy book when thou art youmg, 109, 17 I Quanti profuit nobis haec fabula de Christo, 35 Quis deus incertum est, habitat deus, 414 Red ruin and the breaking-up of laws, 69 Si jeunesse scavoit Et vieillesse pouvoit,
66, 136
Sorrow sleeps ever at the heart, 90 Statio bene fida carinis, 37 Strange to spell or rede, 189 Suffer not the old king, 109, 195 Taste (Touch) not the cup of the sorceress, C9 Te vero mentis inopem, quas oblatum hoc
respuis aurum, 227 The hand that rocks the cradle, 380 The obstinate man does not hold opinions,
48, 118 The red inoon is up on the moss-covered
mountains, 368
The soul that fixes upon earth, 509 The Survivorship of a Good Man in his Son,
290, 374 There is pleasure in the wet, wet clay, 330,
396
Though absence parts us for a while, 53 Though lost to sight, to memory dear, 49 Three members, in three distant counties
born, 411, 476
To digg the dvst encloased heare, 126 Tradition is but a meteor, 230, 355 Traitor ! this bolt shall find and pierce thee
through, 230
Transient and embarrassed phantom, 35 Wealth of London looked pale, 189 When 1 consider life, 'tis all a cheat, 49, 116 Who laughs at sin laughs at his own disease,
509 Whoever turned upon his heel to hear my
counsel, 69 Why come not spirits from the realms of
glory, 136
With pipe and book at close of day, 269, 35o You had better be drown'd than to love and
to dream, 269
You may fool some of the people all the time, 136