NINTH SERIES.
193
xii. 191. Margaret of Bavaria, vi. 454. Margery,
vi. 455. Marriage in a sheet, xii. 214. Marriages
of persons already married to each other, iv. 72.
Mawkin, its meaning, v. 394. Mazes cut in turf,
v. 445. Michaelmas Day, Irish saying on, x. 434.
Mico family, xii. 216. Mistakes, artists', v. 33,
Mistletoe berries, xi. 110. Mithered, its etymology,
vi. 510. Morris's Coffee-House, ii. 271. " Moss-
covered bucket," ix. 148. Mourning Sunday, x.
155. Mug, xii. 231. Mtiller (Max) and West-
minster Abbey, vi. 446. Musical epitaph, iv. 447.
' N. & Q.,' contributors to vol. i., v. 90 ; Jubilee
number, 197. Nameless gravestone, xii. 504.
Napoleon's last years, viii, 509. Naseby revisited,
xi. 461. Nash (Richard), xii. 393. Ng, its pro-
nunciation, xi. 77. Nesquaw, dialect expression,
vi. 37. ' New Critical Review of Public Buildings,'
v. 114. New Zealand, original diocese, xi. 217.
Newcomb (Thomas), viii. 161. Newspaper cut-
tings changing colour, xii. 111. Nothing, xi. 395.
Oakham Castle and its horseshoes, v. 130 ; x. 357.
" Old Curiosity Shop," viii. 88. Old St. Paul's,'
iii. 331. Oliver, ix. 194. Opticians' signs, xi. 412.
Outrider, ix. 18. " Paddle your own canoe," vi.
450. Paganism, survival of, ix. 32. Parish regis-
ters, iv. 482 ; viii. 312. Parlour, viii: 108. Parnell,
poet, his family, v. 97. Pass, xii. 236. Peerless
Pool, iv. 197. Pepys (Mrs. Samuel), xi. 486.
Periwinkle, x. 23(5. Pews annexed to houses,
viii. 428. Peyto, Petto, Peito, or Peto family,
vi. 395. Phillippo, viii. 72. Phipps family,
x. 432. Pidcock and Polito, vi. 517. Plague,
Great, iii. 266. Pope's epitaphs in use, vii. 246.
Pre- Reformation practices in England, xi. 134.
Primitive colouring, xii. 145. Primrose supersti-
tions, xii. 33. Prodigal Son as Sir C. Grandison,
xi. 77. Purcell family, xi. 58, 396. Reade
(Charles), xii. 517. Rhodes (Cecil), his ances-
tors, ix. 436. Rimes, nursery, v. 216. Ringers,
their articles, ii. 55. Roman pits, xii. 131.
Rossetti's ' Ruggiero and Angelica,' x. 32.
Rounds or rungs! iii. 231. St. Albans, brass at,
iii. 171. St. Cross Priory, Isle of Wight, iii. 317.
St. Eanswyth, v. 8, 155. St. Edmund, viii. 193.
St. Mary's, Moorfields, v. 76. St. Marylebone
Church, vi. 432. St. Michael's Church, Bassishaw,
v. 113. St. Pancras Church, Canterbury, v. 178 ;
viii. 260. Samplers, modern, ii. 314. Sawney,
viii. 68. School rules, old, x. 15, 256. Scouring
of land, ii. 238. 'Serjeant Bell and his Raree-
Show,' x. 195. Seven, ix. 98. Sexton's tomb-
stone, xi. 510. Shagreen, iv. 171. Shake-
speare, baptism and burial, i. 68. Shelley's
ancestry, x. 50. Shepherdess Walk, v. 116. Shep-
herds' ring, a, vi. 437. Shot-free, vi. 417. Shrop-
shire names, ii. 255. Shroud, sable, ii. 183. Skulls,
xii. 96. Smythies family, xi. 238. Snicket, its
meaning, viii. 150. Snow-feathers, viii. 494. Sock :
To sock = to thrash, v. 53. " Soft as a toad," v. 54.
Songs, old, viii. 472. Spirits at Hampton Court,
iv. 94. Statistical data, x. 116. Stone pulpit, ix.
157. Stone sedilia in mediaeval churches, vi. 114.
Stow's portrait, 1603, viii. 146. Suffolk name for
ladybird, viii. 87. Sunday morning service, hour
of, x. 77. Sunday-school teachers, earliest instruc-
tions to, ix. 275. Sundial motto, xii. 495. Swift's
visits to England : the " Four Crosses Inn," ix.312.
'Synagogue,' viii. 115. Taw, its origin, iii. 97.
Taylor (John), of Northampton, viii. 223. Teens,
x. 417. Tennyson, meaning of lines by, vi. 31.
Thackeray's death, iv. 113. Thrale (Mrs.), her
house at Streatham Park, x. 57. Tib's Eve, ix.
109 ; x. 98. Tithe-barns, mediaeval, vi. 397. Todd
(Sweeny), viii. 512. Towton and Marston Moor,
iv. 191. Turner (J. M. W.), vii. 48. Uncle Tom,
the original, xi. 512. Usk Castle, vi. 489. Van
de Pump, x. 227. Van Dyck, iv. 264. Vanishing
London: Christ's Hospital, vii. 431. Village feasts,
xii. 448. Village library/xi. 196. Wade (General),
i. 334. Walker (Benjamin), viii. 47. Washington
family, ii. 98. Watch-boxes, i. 514. Water-pipes,
ancient, iv. 15. Weather lore, xii. 225. Whyte-
Melville, viii. 246. Wind folk-lore, ix. 338. Wit-
nessing by signs, xi. 175. Wollaston family arms,
iii. 211. Wroth silver, v. 112. Ycleping the
church, ix. 394. " You are old, Father William,"
iv. 306. Zoar Chapel, Southwark, ix. 73
Page (L.) on Napoleon's first marriage, ix. 347
Page (Dame Mary), her epitaph in Bunhill Fields
burial-ground, x. 466 Paget=Cobbe, iii. 7 Paget (Rev. Francis), The Pageant,' 1843, x. 249,
355, 470
Paget (Hon. Henry), his family, vi. 8, 332. See Pagett. Paget (J. 0.) on Queen Elizabeth at Horham Hall,
iii. 408
Paget (Robert), Sheriff of London in 1536, x. 209,277 Paget (R. H.) on Paget =Cobbe, iii. 7 Pagett (Henry), of Knockglass, co. Mayo, vii. 848 Pagett (Hon. Henry), his parentage, xi. 448. See
Paget. Pagett ( John) = Dorothy Gifford, 1667, xi. 128, 215,
273
Pagett (John), his genealogy, viii. 404 Pagination of books, vi. 147, 258, 373, 411 ; vii. 316 Paice (Joseph) and Charles Lamb, vii. 232 Paine (Thomas), and Charles Inglis, i. 465 ; portrait in ' Carlton House Magazine,' iii. 285, 391 ; iv. 18, 52
Paint, process for removing, iii. 308, 392 ; v. 274 Paint brush, literary use of the term, xii. 307, 356 Painter's name wanted, viii. 165 Painters' expression ; to grin through, viii. 225, 310 Painting, oil, its subject, iii. 67 Painting from the nude, i. 88, 233 Pairing in the House of Commons, vi. 390, 454 Palamedes on ancestors, v. 479. Armagh (martyr Bishop of), ii. 525. Asses braying for tinkers' deaths, i. 46. Basque song, oldest, v. 470. Bayard =horse, i. 165. Bodvoc, its etymon, ii. 284. Brothers bearing same Christian name, v. 54. Bull-doze, i. 248. " By Jingo," i. 411. Caxon= wig, iii. 214. Charles I., supposed portrait of, iv. 169. Church, its gender, iii. 448 ; vi. 350. Cicero on the Dreyfus case, ii. 345. Cross vice kris, i. 317. " Crow to pluck with," i. 367. Crucifixial, origin of the word, i. 227. Dewsiers, iv. 96. Djachwi, its meaning, iii. 348. Dublin, Georgian inscription in, i. 307. Dude, its pronunciation, vi. 450. Bale, its etymology, iv. 55. English