134
GENERAL INDEX.
(Sir John), v. 11. Herne the Hunter, iii. 416.
Hobsonize, new word, ii. 124. Hope (General
Richard), xi. 329 ; xii. 58. Immurement alive of
religious, xii. 517. Ireland, Croinwellites and
Williamites in, iii. 283. Irish soldiers at the battle
of the Boyne, iv. 341 ; vi. 26. Irishmen, their
ubiquity, iii. 309. Iron Duke and the Duke of
Wellington, ix. 466; x. 73, 156, 517. Isabella colour,
xi. 392. James II., and Drogheda, vi. 376; his flight
from Ireland, vii. 329. Jordan (Mrs.) in Dublin, xii.
418. Kinglake (A. W.), ii. 533. Kingston-upon-
Thames, ii. 373. Kitcat (Dick), vi. 237. Knifeboard
of an omnibus, viii. 128. Lacy or De Lacy family,
x. 275. Langrishe (Sir H.), ii. 190. Macaulay
(Lord), passage in 'Ivry,' ii. 253. Macaulay
Zachary), ii. 337. Maid of Orleans, x. 414.
Manners and customs of Shakespeare's time, ix.
494. Marat and The'roigne de Mdricourt, i. 493.
Masse'na (Marshal), iii. 356; iv. 354. Minas and
Empecinado, ix. 350 ; x. 291. Montaigne and
East Anglia, iii. 211. 'More Hints on Etiquette,'
iii. 52. Napier (Sir Charles), and field sports, xii.
76. Napoleon : Marbeuf, iv. 317. Napoleon's
last years, x. 15, 433. Nightcaps, xii. 176. "No
great shakes," iii. 277. O'Connor (Arthur), xi.
352. 'Old St. Paul's,' iii. 418. " Parley's Penny
Library," iii. 233. Parliament Street, ii. 473. Pass,
xii. 334. 'Passing By,' xii. 111. Picts and Scots,
vi. 196. "Policy of pin-pricks," iii. 46, 278.
Prince of Wales's Theatre, Tottenham Street, xii.
476. Prisoners of war, viii. 46. Ranter, its
meaning, i. 134; ii. 136. "Reel in a bottle,"
iv. 318. Robsart (Amy),, xi. 113. Rook-
wood (Ambrose), xi. 5, 514. Rubens's * Descent
from the Cross,' iii. 89. Selwyn (George),
curious taste of, iii. 435. Shakespeare's Seventy-
sixth Sonnet, xi. 249. Sham burials, xii. 432.
Shelley's ancestry, ix. 510. Soldiers, English, at
battle of Colenso, v. 285. Stonyhurst cricket, ii.
76. Strappado, vi. 73. Swift (Dean Jonathan),
ii. 325 ; iii. 76. Taafe family, vi. 189, 258, 353.
Tennyson on Havelock, ii. 184. Thackeray and
FitzGerald, iii. 4. "To the lamp-post," i. 395.
Tobacco : Pirogue, viii. 490. Towton, battle of,
i. 297. Upright burials, xii. 294. Wellington
(Duke of), at Waterloo, i. 125 ; and Ney, ii. 257
and Grassini, iii. 147. " What has posterity done
for us ? " x. 472. " Ye gods and little fishes ! " x
77,114. 'Zincali,'ix. 113
Hope (H. G. T.) on Peter Melge, Huguenot, i. 69 Hope (General Richard), his biography, xi. 329; xii. 5 Hope (R. C.) on pewter and its marks, iv. 526 Hope (Sir Thomas) and Sir Thomas Craig, xi. 406
510 Hope (Sir T. C.) on Mr. Doctor Fulton, xi. 267
Stuart (Lady Arabella), xii. 347 Hope (W. H. St. J.) on church (?) at Silchester, ii
429 ; iii. 110. National flag, vi. 17 ; viii. 112 Hopeful and sanguine, difference between, ix. 467
x. 10, 292 Hopkins, wrestler, the Devonshire Dumpling, xi. 329
473
Hopkins (A.) on Waldrons, Croydon, i. 52 Hopkins (Eliza Ellen), of Fetter Lane, c. 1860, xi 209
[opkins (Bishop Ezekiel), his biography, ii. 17, 75
[opkins (F. A.) on Devonshire Dumpling, xi. 329.
Hopkins (Eliza Ellen), xii. 209 lopkinson (H. C. B.) on Col. C. Godfrey, iii. 409 lop-picker, early quotation for, i. 487; ii. 32, 115 Hoppner (John), R.A., two portraits by, ii. 307 ; his
biography, viii. 402 ; portraits of Viscount
Hampden, xi. 507 Hops, petition against the use of, v. 376, 483; vi. 12 ;
substitutes for, vii. 150, 215, 296, 454 ; viii. 26, 72,
171, 247; x. 174, 304 ; used in 1470, x. 304, 430 ;
xi. 133; in Suffolk and Dorset, xi. 248, 338 Hopton (Arthur), his ' Concordancie of Yeares,' v.
133 lopton (Sir Ralph), a frequently "killed" general,
ii. 465 lopton (Susanna), devotional writer, 1627-1709, vii.
509 ; viii. 109 lorace, " Strenua nos exercet inertia," i. 381; ii. 70,
292 ; iii. 310 ; iv. 291 ; and Chaucer, iii. 224 ;
"Judaeus Apella," iii. 326, 495; iv. 250; trans- lations of, iv. 307 lorden (Bishop), of Moosonee, iv. 427, 525 lordon (H.) on Hordon, iv. 348 Gordon or Horden family, iv. 348, 427, 525 rlorham Hall, Queen Elizabeth at, iii. 408 ' Horizon of practical politics," the phrase, i. 507 Horn, crest on, iv. 328, 406 Horn dancers, survival of old custom in Staffordshire,
viii. 444 ; ix. 11, 117 Hornbeam for fuel, iii. 94 Hornbooks, vi. 126, 320 Home or Hearne, derivation of the name, xi. 188, 275;
xii. 93, 177
Home (A. B.) on the "Twopenny Tube," vii. 375 Home Alley, London, x. 289, 358, 436 Horning, ancient Scottish rite, iv. 496 ; v. 51 Horns on helmets, i. 347; bearing of, iv. 264 ; of
Moses, v. 284 ; vi. 176 Horse-bread, its use and composition, iv. 83, 173, 333,
547, v. 95 Horse-chestnut, its derivation, ii. 46, 94 ; humorous
poem on, ii. 48 ; iii. 31 Horse, and folk-lore, i. 188, 412 ; epitaph on, ii. 325 ;
named Turnbull, xi. 498 Horse equipment, date and origin of various parts of,
v. 148, 213, 360; vi. 155, 214 Horse-gentler = horse-breaker, use of the word in
Lincolnshire, v. 104, 218 Horse Guards, quotations for, ii. 7, 134 Horse marine, origin of the term, ii. 26, 112, 355, 456 ;
iii. 215
Horse-races, first in Prussia, i. 504 Horse-ribbon Day, viii. 225, 312 Horse sense, American phrase, i. 487 ; ii. 32, 131 Horsehair, snakes' antipathy to, xi. 349, 432 Horseman's bed, its meaning, ii. 149 Horses, wild, ii. 103; with four white stockings toll free, vi. 507 ; vii. Ill, 193 ; x. 116 ; marks on, vii. Ill, 193 ; Homeric, fed on wheat, xii. 166 Horseshoes, claimed as toll at Oakham, v. 130 Horsham Church, hymnbook used in, viii. 523 Horsley (J. C.), designer of the first Christmas card,
xii. 347, 391 Horton (Col.), Cromwellian officer, xii. 229, 412