Notes and Queries, Jan. 27, 1917.
SUBJECT INDEX.
545
Clark (William George), editor of ' Sabrirue
Corolla,' 1859, 149, 197, 237 Clarke (Mary Anne), her family, 149 Clay or gravel soils, the most healthy to live on,
17, 59
Clement (William Innell), founder of ' The Ob- server,' 1791, 124
Cleopatra and the pearl, 37, 98, 178 Clerks in holy orders as combatants, 36 Cleypole, Cromwell, and Price families, 508 Clifton (Sir Gervase) of Nottingham, at the Earl
of Shrewsbury's funeral, 1560, 268, 372 Cloth Pair and the Dick Whittington public- house, 248, 295 Cloth industry at Ayr in the seventeenth century,
227, 338
Clubs : Daubigny's Club, its history, c. 1789, 28 " Coals to Newcastle," early references to the
phrase, 250, 299 Coffin, effect of opening, 275 Coffin, garden beds shaped like, 134 Coins, engraved, of the eighteenth century, 529 Colds, germs brought to islanders, 468 Colla da Chrioch, A.D. 332, his biography, 410 Collier (William), M.P. 1713-15, theatrical
manager, 210
Collier family and Fielding, 104 Collins (Arthur), compiler of the ' Peerage,' 351 Colonels and regimental expenses, 529 Colours of the 56th Foot, ' Discourse on the Con- secrating of,' 1819, 188 Comacchio, descriptions of the fisheries at, 210,
257, 334
- ' Comaunde," military meaning of the word,
1786, 89 4 Comic Aldrich,' Oxford skit, 1866, the illustrator
of, 228 Common Garden = Covent Garden, so called c.
1686, 89, 157, 217
Communion tables, inscriptions on, ,250 " Communique," use of the word, 227 Compostela, Santiago de, the relics, 379 Congreve (Thomas), M.D., c. 1717, of Wolver-
hampton, 69, 159, 195 Conolly (Capt. Arthur), story of his martyrdom,
189, 235
Conscription in Bardsey Island, 189, 277 Constable (Timothy), d. 1750, his ancestors, 430 Constable family, 410
" Consumption," meaning of, in seventeenth cen- tury, 35, 217 Contraband difficulties in the eighteenth century,
281 Cooper (W. Cooper), Fellow of the Society of
Antiquaries, 1838, 469 Copley (Arthur) at the Earl of Shrewsbury's
funeral, 1560, 268, 372 Coppinger (Edmund), a " Prophet of Mercy,"
c. 1591, 107
Cornhill, fires during the eighteenth century, 461 Coroner of the City of London and treasure-trove,
51, 91, 157
Corporate seals, the custody of, 148, 238 " Correll," 1677, meaning of the word, 488 " Cotte "= workman's or peasant's overall, 115 Cotton (Charles), his ' Compleat Gamester,' 1687,
514 Covent Garden called Common Garden, c. 1686,
89, 157, 217
41 Court " in French place-names, 249, 318, 339 Coverlo, place close to Venetian territory, 33, 94 Cox (Capt.), his ' Book of Fortune,' 1575, 185, 202
Crests : a demi-lion rampant gules, 107, 195, 237 ;
gauntlet clasped, grasping a naked hand couped
at the wrist, 128, 279 ; out of a naval crown a
dexter arm in armour embowed, 90 ; swan's head
between two rods, 129, 195
Crests, British, the publication of a book on, 149 Crests on engraved coins, eighteenth century, 529 Cricket, origin of the term " hat trick," 70,
136, 178, 375, 416 ; meaning of the term
" yorker," 209, 276, 376, 416, 478 " Cricket "= three-legged stool, use of the word,
287, 334, 414, 496 Croft (Sir Herbert) and Lowth, 310 Cromwell (Oliver), book on baronets and knights
created by, 129, 198 ; his cousin Mrs. St. John,
171, 217, 236 ; his accident with a gun, 529 Cromwell, alias Williams (Rabsey), a relative of
the Protector, 136
Cromwell, Cleypole, and Price families, 508 " Crookern." etymology of the word, 470 il Crowner's Quest law, exercised 1916, 207 Crystal Palace, Sir Charles Fox and, 108 Cumberland (Bear-Admiral William), his Christian
name, 409
Cumming family, 210
Cunningham (Sir W.), temp. George IV., 29, 94 Cup, silver, coats of arms on, 129, 195 Curwen (John), b. 1816, founder of the Tonic
Sol-Fa method, 388 Cyprus cat, variety of tabby cat, 427
Danteiana, 481
Darcy (Lord) of the North, at the Earl of Shrews- bury's funeral, 1560, 268, 372, 420, 436 Darcy (Thomas), Kt., b. 1506, of the King's
Artillery, 128 Darling (Grace), number of persons saved by,
1838, 370
Darvell Gadarn, Welsh saint, 27 " Davis (Mr. Thomas)," actor, friend of Mrs.
Siddons, c. 1779, 290, 356
Day (William), Bishop of Winchester, his wife, 408 Daylight - saving calendar, called " Willett's
time," 188
Daubigny's Club, its history, c. 1789, 28 De la Porte. See Porte. Dead, " good-night " to the, custom of early
Christians, 70
" Dead season," early use of the phrase, 1656, 147 " Dead secret," early use of the phrase, 107 Decanter for spirits, belonging to an old British
regiment, 489 Deeds and manuscripts, restoration of, 268, 316,
437
Denmark Court, London, its situation, 50, 119 Dentists of the eighteenth century, 64, 115, 194,
218, 399
Derham family of Dolphinholme, 448, 536 Dialect, the decay of, 447
Dickens (C.) : his use of the phrase " How not to do it," 17 ; reminiscence of Macready in his
' Edwin Drood,' 25 ; his ' Bleak House,' 330 ;
notes on his ' Pickwick Papers,' 368 ; his
description of the reign of Henry VIII., 529 Dickson (Ellen), " Dolores," composer of songs,
1819-78, 71 Dickson, Forrester, Simpson and Anderson
families, 428 Dick Whittington public - house, c. 1598, its
demolition, 248, 295