142
GENERAL INDEX.
Japanese folk-lore, xii. 477
Japanese monkeys, xi. 2, 76, 430, 517; xii. 237
Japanese names, viii. 14, 66
Japp (Dr. A. H.) and Prof. E. H. Palmer, xii. 326 Jarnac on ' Kockingham,' i. 187 Jarndyce v. Jarndyce, v. 156, 295 Jarratt (F.) on Cambridge Senior Wranglers, i. 505. Doctor as Christian name, v. 194. Fees for search- ing parish registers, xi. 252. Hull saying, viii. 52. Jews and eternal punishment, x. 334 ; xii. 10. Lyceum Library, Hull, xi. 89. Monarch in a wheelbarrow, xi. 14. Parish registers, xii. 317. Pattens worn by women, i. 336. River not flowing on the Sabbath, xii. 175. Shakespeare queries, vii. 454. Tennyson's ' Ancient Sage,' Hi. 376 Jarrett (E. N.) on arms wanted, xii. 329 Jarvie (Bailie Nicol), original prototype of, vi. 489 Jay, woodland bird, origin and meaning, ix. 308, 414 Jay (Sir James), doctor, his biography, viii. 145, 252 Jeakes (Capt.) and Muscat pirates, iii. 444, 491 Jeakes (T. J.) on acacia in Freemasonry, vii. 497. Bee-lore, ancient, iii. 418. " Beetle and Wedge," iii. 134. Blue Beard, viii. 24, 149. "Bon Roi Dagobert," viii. 425. Bottled ale, its invention, vii. 514. Breslaw, viii. 229. Bulls in coats of arms, iii. 395. Burnt sacrifice : mound burial, viii. 470. Cardboard models, iii. 477. Caul, iii. 491. Caxon = wig, ii. 26. Charme, its mean- ing, ii. 173 ; iii. 94. Chocolate, viii. 488. Cirage, its meaning, ii. 514. "City of Lushington," v. 103. Claret and vin-de-grave, ii. 156, 433. Coco de mer, or double coco-nut, vii. 417. Colpeara, its meaning, vii. 432. Crong, its meaning, vii. 433. Dendritic markings in paper, vii. 477. Dibble, its etymology, iv. 14. Drowned bodies recovered, iii. 255. Druidism in France, ii. 353. East India Company, its flag, viii. 209. Fables, Eastern and Western, viii. 241. Fire- fan ged, viii. 51. Flower game, vii. 397. Folk-lore, ii. 132. Foot outlines as records of pilgrimage, iv. 464. Foulrice : lock elm : chincherer, vii. 453. Gallows birds and others, iv. 127; v. 172. Geese, wild, as emblems of constancy, ii. 114. Ghosts, sporting, iii. 297. Halsh, viii. 327. Hampton Court tapestry, ii. 245. Hampton Court water-
S'pes, ii. 112. Heber (Reginald), viii. 285. empsheres, place-name, ii. 154. Hereditary odour, iv. 94. Hernsue, i. 477. Hogarth's House, viii. 24. Horse-bread, iv. 547. Implement, domestic, i. 489. Jews, black, v. 33. Kitty-witches, ii. 134. Ladles, brass, ii. 187. Little Gidding : Stourbridge Fair, viii. 350. Lizard folk-lore, vii. 436. " Mad as a hatter," vii. 396. Madonna, black images of the, iii. 190. Mays, use of the word in America, v. ! Muscat, brush with pirates, iii. 444. Neptune and crossing the Line, viii. 19. Newspaper, first half- penny, v. 154. Norman gizer, iv. 112 ; v. 384 Pall Mall, viii. 170. Pall-mall and golf, vii. 352. Parlour, viii. 25. Pews annexed to houses, vii. 518 ; viii. 191, 288. Phillippo, viii. 131, 333. " Pint umbit," viii. 135. Pompey's Pillar, iii. 410. Port- land vase, viii. 330. Preen, Salop, iii. 492. Prisoners of war in our literature, viii. 153. Punch the beverage, ii. 192. Quarre Abbey, iv. 233 Randan, its derivation, iii. 114. " Reed painted to look like iron," ii. 230. Rights and royalties of the
sea, iv. 428. Riming warning to book-borrowers,
iv. 484. Ristori (Madame), . iv. 445. Sackville
(Charles), sixth Earl of Dorset, iv. 446. Sargent
family, vii. 432. Shakespeariana, i. 83. Ships of
war on land, vii. 431. Smoak=to twig, iv. 78.
Sock: To sock=to thrash, v. 53. Soudan folk-
lore, ii. 224. Spider folk-lore, viii. 194. Tapping
and tipping, vii. 456. Textile, its meanings, ii. 54.
The Beurre, v. 114. Tiger=boy groom, ii. 78 ; iv.
276. Trade = road, iv. 462. Troubadour and
daisy, vii. 457 ; viii. 369. Twilly toes, iv. 31.
Village, deserted, iii. 491. Water-pipes, ancient,
iv. 15. West-Countrymen's tails, viii. 87. "Who
stole the donkey ? " i. 4Q6. Wind gauge, iii. 478.
Windsor chairs, iv. 12. Worcestershire folk-lore,
vii. 374
Jean le Manique, Sieur de Boucicault, his biography,
vii. 367, 454
Jeanne de France, her portrait, i. 349 Jebb (Camilla) on Ireland and frogs, vii. 186 " Jeber's cooks," meaning of the term, vii. 148, 238 Jeer, etymology of the word, xi. 24, 487 ; xii. 357 Jeffrey : old Jeffrey and the Wesleys, xi. 288, 396 Jeffrey (Lord), his house named Craigcrook, xi. 146,
252
Jeffreys and Cosby families, iii. 308 Jehoshaphat = diocesan, iv. 267 Jekyll surname, its derivation, iv. 415, 483 ; v. 152,
290
Jelalabad, mineral springs at, vii. 63 Jel&leddin, English version of his ' Gazels,' xii. 326 Jelf and Slingsby families, ii. 408, 457 Jenkins (R.) on Godfrey Box, iii. 48. Sand-paper,
i. 18
Jenkins's ear, the story of, viii. 61 Jenkins's hen, in ' Letters and Memorials of Jane
Welsh Carlyle,' xii. 208, 335 Jennings (Frances), of St. Albans, Sutherland, xii.
349, 471
Jennings (Henry Constantine), art collector, xii. 486 Jennings (Ri chard) = Frances Thornhurst, xii. 349,
471
Jepson (0.) on " The truest wealth," xii. 329 Jere bottoo, use and derivation of the words, xii. 89 Jere mode, use and derivation of the woi'ds, xii. 89 Jeremaid, use and sense of the word, ii. 29 Jermyn on an alabaster group, ii. 427. Bradshaw (J.), xi. 288. House of Commons, 1640, xii. 408. Lollier (Jeanette), Bouquetiere du Palais Koyal, iv. 49 Jeroboam = large bottle of wine, use of the word,
viii. 62 Jerome (J. K.), his 'Three Men on the Bummel,'
v. 436
Jerram (C. S.) on ' Bailiffs Daughter of Islington,' i. 229. Green an unlucky colour, xi. 33. Marriage in a sheet, xii. 314. Romany Chal, iii. 373. Ullig=: Christmas in Manx, ix. 57 Jerrold (C.) on Lupo-mannaro, ix. 476 Jerrold (W\) on almanac medals, viii. 467. Annie of Tharau, xi. 91. Author of lines wanted, xi. 90. Coleridge in Rome, viii. 402. ' Coming K ,' &c., viii. 409. Hood (T.), xi. 306. Longfellow's ' Wreck of the Hesperus,' xii. 216. Rebellion of 1745, xii. 169, 356. Roscommon and Pope, xii.