2SO
GENERAL INDEX.
vi. 266 ; maimed, and Marshalsea money, 348;
their card games, ix. 384
Soleby, co. Leicester, its locality, ii. 89, 158, 196 Solecize, vi. 287 Solemne (Anthony de), first printer at Norwich (1565-
1580), vii. 241, 331
Solent, etymology of the name, xii. 248, 394 Solicitor on "Perform'd" in old will, ii. 148 Solomon (King), his gift of Israeli tish towns, i. 87, 352 ;
and Aphikia, wife of Jesus ben Sirach, xii. 222, 261 Solomon (Samuel), his * Guide to Health,' vii. 12, 131 Soluta, its meaning, iii. 268, 397 Sombre (Dyce), and Walpole letters, xii. 366 ; his
parentage, 438 Somers (John, Lord), dedication of vol. i. of
' Spectator, ' i. 285
Somers (Lord), his crest and motto, viii. 104, 169 Somerset family, evolution of its nose, x. 34, 236, 315.
391, 417
Somerset on primrose superstition, xi. 448 Somerset (the Protector Duke of), his correspondence,
viii. 122 ; his widow's residence at Han worth,
Middlesex, ix. 148, 218 Somersetshire on Earl Darsy, x. 209 Somersetshire ballad, vii. 368 Somersetshire superstition, ii. 186 Somerville (B. A.) on Irish assize courts, i. 157 Somerville (W.), his poem ' The Chase/ vii. 447 : xi.
325, 395
Sommerville (C. W.) on Sir Francis Nicholson, vii. 28 Son, story of an ungrateful, xi. 226 ; xii. 116 -Son, surnames in, iii. 90, 176, 237 Song, Anglo- Scottish, xi. 265 Song, coon, origin of the term, xii. 269, 338 ' Song in the Market-place,' poem or recitation, i. 29
Songs and Ballads:
Alonzo the Brave, i. 287; ii. 35
And the villain still pursued her, xi. 368
And whose little pigs are these, these, these ? xi.
229
Ask nothing more of me, Sweet, viii. 334, 394, 507 Baby-Land, xii. 267
Bailiff's Daughter of Islington, i. 229, 291, 354 Ballade of the Jubilee of ' Notes and Queries ' iv,
392
Basque song, the oldest, v. 470 Bonny boy is young, i. 469
Beggar's Petition, viii. 104, 212, 351, 472 ; ix. 76 Oamptown "Races, i. 19, 45 Canadian Boat Song, vii. 368, 512 ; ix. 483 : x.
64; xi. 57, 134, 198; xii. 364 Charlie is my Darling, ix. 401, 511 Cherry Ripe, i. 488 ; ii. 98 Claverhouse's Lament, v. 229 Come, all ye lads of high renown, ix. 388, 492 Come, lasses and lads, ii. 68, 132 Comin' thro' the Rye, ii. 66, 197, 270, 434 Coming out of the little end of the horn, iv. 114,
156
Coronation, ix. 507 Cruel was the winds, vi. 28 Cupid's Garden, xi. 6 Dean and Prebendary, iii. 328 Dulce Domum, iii. 208, 286, 371
Songs and Ballads :
Dying Maiden's Address to her Lover, i. 409
Every bullet has its billet, v. 88
Fair Dorinda, ii. 127, 173
Farmer of St. Ives, ii. 386, 430
Foes of Old England, iv. 148
French, ii. 529 ; iii. 93
From a nate little village in Zummerzetshire, vii.
368
From the lone shieling. See Canadian Boat Song. Gay Goshawk, French version, vi. 249 Gentle shepherd, tell me where, viii. 423, 530 ;
ix. 113, 416 ; xii. 377 Guillotine ditty, iii. 85 Habbie Simpson, xi. 229, 436 Heir of Linne, v. 129
I dwelt in a city enchanted, xi. 407, 450, 471 I'll hang my harp on a willow tree, v. 375, 484,
526
I '11 try and find a link to bind, x. 327, 473 I saw a weeping maiden, iii. 489 I 've travelled about a bit in my time, vi. 450 I would that my heart were as light, xi. 148 In hurry post haste for a licence, v. 275 In the days when we went gipsying, viii. 15, 221,
287
Isle of St. Helena, vi. 349 Jenny of Monteith, ix. 288 John Barleycorn, xi. 249 Kathleen Mavourneen, vii. 388, 430 ; viii. 349 La Blanche F<$e, ix. 168 Lake of the Dismal Swamp, ii. 287 Lamentations of a Sinner, viii. 104, 212, 351 Lamplighter Dick, viii. 104, 212, 351 Lass of Richmond Hill, vii. 169 Last Whistle, vi. 129 Le Bon Roi Dagobert, viii. 205, 247, 425 Let 'em come, vii. 157 Lincolnshire Poacher, x. 38, 111, 258 Little Tafflin, ix. 347, 391 Lucy's Flitting, iii. 229, 317 Marseillaise, viii. 61, 126, 187, 245, 287, 331,
372, 407, 473
Mary had a little lamb, xi. 309, 433 Merrily danced the Quaker's wife, xii. 268, 370 Mistletoe Bough, tragedy repeated, vi. 227;
parody on, 229, 314
My Boy Billy : My Boy Tammy, xi. 265 My father kept a horse, ix. 388 My Johnnie was a shoemaker, vi. 28 My life is full of thee, vi. 428 My lodging is on the cold ground, iv. 397, 505 My Old Oak Table, xii. 448, 514 Needle pedlars, viii. 105, 229, 510 Now, here we 're met to take our glass, x. 493 O saw ye my father, O saw ye my mother, ix. 147
233 O where have you been, Lord Randal, my son ?
iii. 204 Oh, funny and free are the bachelor's revelries,
viii. 145, 228, 466
Oh ! good ale, thou art my darling, xi. 349 Once the gods of the Greeks, ix. 77, 254 Ote-toi de la, que je m'y mette, x. 75 Paddle your own Canoe, vii, 53, 414, 493