NINTH SERIES.
257
Surnames :
Swigg, iv. 329, 464 j v. 112 Talbot, vi. 242 ; vii. 336 Taltarum, v. 28, 131 Vinrace, v. 370 Welsh, iv. 107, 216, 293 Zangwill, iv. 246
Surquedry, use and meaning of the word, xii. 457 Surrey (Henry Howard, Earl of), lines to Lady
Geraldine, iv. 237 Surrey etymologies, ii. 181, 296 Suspicion, goods sent on, use of the term, xii. 246 Sussex clergy, 1607-26, xi. 28 Sutherland family of Duffus, ii. 408 SSutton (C. W.) on dedication to the Queen of Eng- land, xi 495. ' Legacy of an Etonian,' iii. 274 Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire, rectors of, vi. 388,
458 ; vii. 75
Sutton family arms, i. 157 Sutton Valence School, timetable dated 1540, xi. 186,
294
Sutty, bookseller, 1700-30, his biography, v. 26 Suum Cuique on Pythagoras and Christianity, v. 426 Suwarroff, and Lord Roberts, v. 454, 521 ; and
Masse^a, vii. 108, 192, 213, 231 Swabbers =ace and court cards in whist, iv. 249, 318,
387
Swain, painting by, xi. 428
Swakeleys, near Uxbridge, its history, ii. 368, 496 Swallow, poem on, i. 167; its song, ii. 143, 471; iii.
93, 171 ; "chimney " or "barn," iii. 324 Swallows predicting a storm, xii. 206 Swan (M.) on ground ivy, xii. 366 Swan, its drenching or crying, ii. 27, 196 Swan, ancient ordinance respecting, vi. 490 Swansea, its derivation, i. 43, 98, 148, 194, 370, 433,
496 ; iii. 470 ; iv. 37, 110, 230, 407; v. 11 Swansea (Anne of), novelist, xi. 347 Swarraton on Thomas Eyre, i. 8 Swaylecliffe, place-name, its origin, ix. 329, 378 Swean or sween, its meaning, iii. 69, 212, 270 Sweating-pits in Ireland, ii. 107, 157, 271 ; iii. 54 Swede, a ghost-word, viii. 521 Sweden, metempsychosis in, ix. 187 Swedenborg (Bmanuel), and Robert Southey, vii. 186 ; and "Speranza," 287; and Coventry Patmore, vii. 345, 411; his earliest publication, x. 304; his early life, xi. 429
Swedenborg Society and Coleridge, iv. 536 Swedenborgian druggist, Macaulay on, xii. 308 Swedenborgianism in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, iv. 245 ;
and Frederick Tennyson, xi. 27, 154 Sween or swean, its meaning, iii. 69, 212, 270 Sweep's sign in Wem, vii. 326
Sweepstakes, use of the word in connexion with build- ing, v. 336, 464
Sweetheart, spelling of the word, xi. 420 Sweeting (Kev. W. D.) on Henry Curtis, ii. 489. Defoe, descendant of, vii. 298. Epitaphs, ii. 536. Exhumation of Henry IV., x. 32. Gamp (Mrs.), viii. 426. Grammar, doubtful, ii. 432. Kennett (Bishop White), his father, x. 13. Latin for Rother- hithe, viii. 425. Moore (Rev. Charles), vi. 102. Mourning Sunday, x. 73. " Quite a few," xi. 33. Sanderson (Bishop), his descendants, ix. 511
Sweffling Church, Suffolk, arms in, vii. 87
Swelp, use of the word, xi. 149, 274
Sweyn (King), pronunciation of his name, xii. 329,
394 Swift (Dean Jonathan), his cousin german Mrs.
Whiteway, ii. 147; a descendant, ii. 325; iii. 76;
his Vanessa, ii. 327 ; lines on, vi. 107, 177, 292 ;
his visits to England and the " Four Crosses" Inn,
ix. 186, 312 ; early editions of 'Gulliver's Travels,'
449 ; inaccurate allusion to, x. 325, 451 ; his man
of wood and leather, xi. 369, 458 Swift (F.) on Timothy Swift, xii. 367 Swift (Theophilus) and Miss Trefusis, vi. 281 Swift (Timothy) = Ann Williams, c. 1775, xii. 367 Swift family, iv. 108
Swigg surname, its origin, iv. 329, 464 ; v. 112 Swim-shell, method of divination by, iv. 68 Swimming exploits, vi. 21, 43, 137, 198, 404, 511 ;
long distance, 284 Swinburne, and Carlyle and Coleridge, x. 189, 296 ;
on translations, xii. 285, 473 Swindler, derivation of the word, x. 127, 278 Swinhoe, meaning of the name, x. 129 Swinton (G. S. C.) on Gentleman Porter, i. 33. Green
table, i. 157. Kinborough as female Christian name,
ix. 156. Peat, iv. 76. Pedigrees, criticisms on,
i. 148
Swiss Connection on noble, vii. 208 Swiss dialects, xii. 461 Sword worn at the right side, iv. 285 Sword-belt, carriage of, iv. 286, 447 ; v. 237 Swords, Jacobite, ii. 288 Sworn clerks in Chancery, ix. 512 ; xii. 154, 277, 335,
375
Swound=a fainting-fit, v. 356, 464 Swynnerton (C.) on Bland, Edinburgh actor, xii. 207,
335. Eighteenth century characters, xii. 348.
Fashionable slang of the past, ix. 368. Hawthorn,
xii. 268, 437. Infant Saviour, xii. 29. Latin entry
in register, xii. 206. Parish registers, xii. 318.
Reynolds's portraits, xi. 467. Songs, old, v. 437.
Surizian, xi. 287, 417
Swjnnerton (P.) on Rev. Sam. Dunlop, x. 88 Sybrit = banns, i. 144, 214 Sycophant, its Greek equivalent, iii. 484 ; iv. 75 Syde Church, near Cirencester, ii. 47 Sydenham, Jews' Walk at, iii. 62 ; jubilee of the first
great International Exhibition at, viii. 139, 272 Sydenham Wells Park, its opening, vii. 445 Sykes ( W.) on allusions in ' Sartor Resartus,' xi. 117.
Almond tree as an emblem of old age, x. 68.
Birmingham's dress, xi. 33. Bonaparte's attempted
invasion of England, i. 71. Cornish wreckers, xi.
126, 274. Cures for epilepsy and thrush, xii. 47-
English accentuation, xi. 515. Fitchett's 'Nelson
and his Captains,' xi. 206. Historical point in an
epitaph, xi. 135. Ice before Christmas, xi. 54.
Monorail system of conveyance, xi. 26. Tandem, x. 308. Thackeray: his belief in homoaopathy, x. 63, 197 ; his carefulness as to details, xi. 367. Thellusson (Peter), i. 97. " Three Towns," x. 189, ' Wellington and his Lieutenants,' xi. 404. Wilber- force (Bishop S.), x. 344
Sylvester (Joshua), poet, vii. 228, 315, 358, 374, 615