GENERAL INDEX.
Embroidery, antique escutcheon, v. 245
Emeritus on accon, xii. 29. Accorder, xii. 89.
Barrator, x. 166. Bisk, xii. 186. Black cats, xii.
69. Cape Gardafui, xi. 496. Ejulate, xi. 47.
Eparchy, x. 407. Fountain pens, xi. 390. Glanius,
'Voyage to Bengala,' xi. 489. Grissard, x. 227.
Keemore shells, xi. 189. Oranges, xii. 170.
Raggie, xii. 388. " Running amuck," x. 307.
Sniping, xi. 308. Tailed Africans, x. 198 Emerson (R. W.), quotation in his ' Essays,' ii. 27, 118 Emery family, v. 27, 115, 174, 341 Emett genealogy, xi. 489 Emmas at Hull Fair, iv. 381 ; v. 278 Emmaus, origin of the place-name, iii. 328 ; vi. 86 Emmet (Robert), his letters, iii. 349, 472 Emmet family and Madame de Fontenay, correspond- ence between, xii. 308
Emmet and ant, distinction between, xi. 89, 112 Empecinado and Minas, leaders in Spanish guerilla
war, ix. 188, 349 ; x. 257, 291 Empire, the, and the Kingdom of Aries, vii. 166 Enborne, East and West, riding the black ram at, xii.
483
Encyclopaedia, use of the word, xii. 27, 172, 291 Encyclopedia for encyclopaedia, iii. 325 ' Encyclopaedia Britannica,' error in, vii. 165; and
Count Egmont, ix. 184 ; Jewish writers in the
Supplement, x. 146
Encyclopaedias, their compilation, iv. 126 Endeavour, H.M.'s barque, ii. 248 ; iii. 438 Endorsement : dorso-ventrality, ix. 64, 212, 331, 415 ;
x. 93, 218
Endowing purse, iii. 328, 412, 476 " Energetic Old Man," " The Christian Knight," iv.
518 ; v. 93
Energeticness, new word, i. 85 Enghien (Due d'), place of his execution, xi. 401 ; dog
which followed him, xii. 28, 92, 174 Engiven in the ' History of the Sleaford Holy Trinity
Guild,' its meaning, viii. 424 England, Bonaparte's attempted invasion, i. 16, 71,
255, 419 ; Roman, 36 ; Roman potteries in, 68,
196 ; monastic orders in, ii. 329, 474 ; foreign arms
in, iii. 308, 361, 372 ; histories of, v. 127, 189, 276,
398 ; reproduced in America, vii. 471 ; a land of
many religions and one sauce, ix. 407, 472 ; x. Ill ;
merry England and the Mass, ix. 508 ; x. 55, 114 ;
dedication to the Queen of, xi. 406, 495 ; Jews in,
xii. 328
England spelt Ingland, xii. 448 England v. Great Britain, vii. 367 England's Darling, use of the title, ix. 290, 412, 454 ;
x. 258
English, Middle, the use of d for th in, x. 321 English as a universal language, xi. 505 English accentuation, xi. 408, 515 ; xii. 94, 158, 316,
475
English cardinals, list of, xii. 105, 192, 435 English coinage, origin of, v. 29, 149 1 English Dialect Dictionary,' xii. 194, 444 English family, iv. 398 English grammar, innovation in, i. 308, 433 English grave at Ostend, xii. 9, 176, 235, 278, 495 English guttural sounds, apparent irregularities in, iii.
English language, its antiquity, ii. 261 ; its sources,
xi. 246 English letters, Old and Middle, i. 169, 211, 258, 313 ;
ii. 275, 336
English literature in French homes, x. 425 'English Mercuric,' 1588, forgery, xii. 29, 70, 153 English newspaper, the earliest, xii. 29, 70, 153 English parsimony and the cat, vii. 418; x. 174 English provinces, iii. 161
English rimes to foreign words, iii. 287, 436 ; iv. 193 " English take their pleasures sadly," xii. 32 Englishmen, portraits in Korner Museum, Dresden,
ii. 461 ; buried abroad, x. 108 English-speaking, early use of the word, vi. 486 ;
vii. 12
Engraver, seal, vi. 389 Engravers, early Jewish, xi. 88, 194 Engraving, steel and copper, iv. 13 Engravings : of House of Commons, 1821-3, i. 188,
468 ; of Cromwell's Parliament, ii. 128 ; of Helen
and Paris, iii. 467 ; of Chatham's monument, 468 ;
of Harrogate Spa, iv. 209 ; of Cleopatra, xii. 269 Enigma on the letter H, vi. 85, 177 Enigmas : " Man cannot live without my first," i. 11,
157; "Totum sume, fluit," &c , ^9, 131; by W. M.
Praed, v. 26, 75, 176 ; " I'm the loudest of voices in
orchestra heard," xii. 60. See also Charade and
Riddle.
Enlistment, records of, vi. 268 Ennius, complete edition, ii. 92 Enquirer on bee or wasp as artist's device, x. 468.
Chaplain to William III., viii. 83. Gore family,
viii. 145. Sheridan (Mrs.), ii. 247, 347 Enriquez (A. G.), 1601-60, Jewish dramatist, vi. 185 Enstone, Oxon, origin of the name, iii. 128, 332, 435 Entapis, use of the term, v. 167 ' Entertaining Gazette,' periodical, i. 505 Entire, brewers', v. 100, 175 Entwisle family, iv. 438, 523
Envelopes, their introduction, xii. 245, 397, 434, 490 Eo in names, its pronunciation, i. 305 Eparchy, earliest use of the word, x. 407 ; xi. 15 Epigram on an epigram, v. 287
Epigrams :
"A little garden Jowett made," vii. 405, 512; viii. 69
Alexandre, ventriloquist, ii. 305
" But as it is, Fred," viii. 224, 306, 371
Coleman the Jesuit, error corrected, x. 447
'Ev CKOTig. SKOTO2, iii. 346, 434
" For the good of their country all criminals die," iii. 449
"George the First was always reckoned," ix. 100, 164, 318, 354
" God bless the king ! I mean the Faith's de- fender," v. 388 ; viii. 445, 533 ; ix. 138
Greek, x. 213
" His bags of gold the miser weighs," vi. 46
" His namesake, born of Jewish breeder," vi. 443 ; viii. 82
" Immortal Newton never spoke," xii. 335, 392, 493
" In Craven Street, Strand," iii, 440
Kay, Bvjcavave, ix. 331