60
GENERAL INDEX.
Caserta (El Conde de), his title, vii. 224
Cashier on Detenus, iv. 426. Emmas at fairs, v. 278.
Mistakes, artists', v. 33. "People of the Red- letter," iv. 418 Cashin (F.), artist, ii. 327 1 CasselPs Magazine,' its history, ix. 3, 24 Cassocks, red, iii. 188, 332 ; blue, 368, 475 Casti's ' Animali Parlanti, ' translated by Rose, iii. 486 Castle Carewe, Pembroke, its original name, ix. 428,
490 ; x. 92, 214, 314, 373, 453 ; xi. 18, 91 ; xii. 194 Castle Rushen, Castletown, Isle of Man, xi. 168, 237,
357
Castle Society of Musick, xii. 486 Castlemore on book for children, vii. 47 Castlereagh : "Loading his Castlereagh," i. 247 Castlereagh (Lord), his portrait, i. 47, 158, 197 Castles, heraldic, i. 269, 414
Castles, Hertfordshire, Anstey and Bennington, vi. 409 Castor-oil plant, flies, and eucalyptus trees, viii. 224,
511 ; ix. 11, 73 Castri Montisemi, vi. 348 Cat and English parsimony, vi. 206 ; vii. 418 Catacombs, Paris, photographs of, viii. 422, 512 Catacombs of the Lavra of Petchersk, x. 484 Catalogues: of English book sales, v. 429,490; vi. 22,
83, 142 ; of first book auction in England, vi. 86,
156, 318, 391 ; of musical instruments, vii. 207 ; of
painted and engraved portraits, vii. 341, 438, 470,
512 ; viii. 72, 231
Cataloguing, its curiosities, ii. 206, 531 Cataloguing, notes on, iii. 102 Cataluna, British epitaphs in, ix. 326, 478 Catechism, definition of the word, xii. 384 Catechism, historical, in Irish Catholic schools, xi.
209, 316
Cateley (Ann), her biography, i. 244 Cater, use and meaning of the word, xii. 188, 313 Catery, office of Sergeant of the, vii. 169 Cathedral and church organs destroyed by Cromwell,
iv. 151, 189, 276, 310, 401, 499 Cathedrals, their comparative dimensions, i. 180, 206 ;
laymen reading the lessons in, v. 376, 466 ; the
woodwork of English, vi. 68, 135 ; French, 107, 174;
fireplaces in, ix. 88, 216
Catherine Street Theatre, Strand, vii. 268 ; viii. 194 Cathermot, his leaflet publications, xii. 144 Catholic. See Roman Catholic. Catlin : Weekes : Brocas, vii. 267 Cattle, new varieties for parks, i. 468 ; ii. 50 ; blessed
in Brittany, iv. 8, 95 ; executed as criminals, 49,
151 ; infectious disease among, 1748-9, v. 335 ; vi.
16, 158 Cattle, white, prophecy concerning, v. 147, 234 ; and
devil worshippers, viii. 285 Cats, black, and the Mahrattas, xii. 69, 115 Cats born in May, superstition concerning, x. 9, 77 Cat's-meat Square, v. 148 Caul, child's, iii. 26, 77, 175, 295 ; its names, iii. 408,
491
Caumont, St. Sebastien at, xi. 328 ' Causidicade,' satirical poem, ii. 8, 112 Cavalier and Roundhead families of Carmarthen and
Glamorgan, x. 168, 211
Cavaliere Gaudente, meaning of the term, xi. 187 Cavatina, origin of the word, xii. 227, 276
Cave (Sir Richard), M.P. for Lichfield 1641-2, v. 209
Caved in, origin of the phrase, iii. 385
Cavendish or Candishe, Mallorie, and Sir Henry
Wotton, xii. 367, 476
Cavendish (Henry), celebrated chemist, v. 4, 94 Cavendish (Stephen de), Mayor of London, 1362-3, ii.
326
Caxon^wig, ii. 26, 132 ; iii. 214 Caxton (William), his story of the good priest, v. 310 ;
record price for book printed by, ix. 245 ; his ' Book
of Divers Ghostly Matters,' xii. 184, 303, 373 Cecil, its pronunciation, ii. 168, 238, 275, 512 ; iii. 34,
154 Cecil (Dorothy), her burial-place and epitaph, viii. 362,
386, 490, 529 ; ix. 53 Cecil family and name, iii. 34, 154, 213 Cecilia on " Chevaux orynges " : " Feuilles de lattier,"
Vii. 488 Cedar trees first grown in England, ii. 187, 214, 290,
333 ; iii. 36
Cedilla, its omission in dictionaries, viii. 262 Ceiling inscription at Rushbury,in Shropshire, ix. 386 ;
x. 135
Ceiling or cieling, ii. 284 ; iii. 53, 194 4 Celebrities and I,' the title, xi. 368, 416, 494 Celer on affection and connexion, x. 203. " Baffweek,"
x. 17. Bishops' signatures, ix. 272. Duchy of
Berwick, ix. 130. England's Darling, ix. 454.
High-faluting, ix. 217. Hog, ix. 411. Lurden, ix.
235. Meresteads or mesesteads, x. 53. Rene=a
small watercourse, ix. 434. Saulies, ix. 151.
Swaylecliflfe, ix. 378. Tedula, a bird, ix. 433.
Wagues, ix. 255. Whitsunday, 1593. ix. 453 Celer et Audax on African names, ii. 152. All Souls'
Day ditty, iii. 126, 316. Bee-lore^ ancient, iii. 286.
Bees and rose-leaves, iii. 433. Bertie (Miss Di), iv.
355. Christmas Day on Sunday, iii. 284. Chute
and Mildmay families, iv. 194. " Common or
garden," iv. 155. Crosby Place, iii. 431. Epitaph,
ii. 146. James II. at Rochester, iii. 384. Jewish
antiquities at Lincoln, iv. 24. Links with the past,
iv. 275. ' Prodigal Son,' i. 137. Roman remains,
discovery of, iv. 266. Town's husband, i. 109.
Wishing wells, visiting the, iii. 443 Cellini (Benvenuto) and Shakespeare, ix. 308, 416 ;
his hammer, xii. 269
Celsus (Cornelius), his biography, xii. 347 Celt on Danes in Pembrokeshire, x. 373. McDonough
(Felix Bryan), xi. 87 Celtic, use of the term, ix. 246, 317 Celtic on FitzStephen family, ii. 270. Celtic personal names, ii. 329 Celtic titles, xii. 367 Celtic words in use in Anglo-Saxon parts, ii. 387 ; iii.
193, 258, 433
Celts and the Massagetse, ix. 228 Cely family and St. Olave, Hart Street, xi. 405 Censers, hanging, xii. 447 Census, Celtic schedules in 1901, vii. 308 Census paper of the Duke of Wellington, vii. 265 'Cent JSouvelles Nouvelles,' English translation of,
ix. 368, 410
Centaur-myth, germ of a modern, vii. 286 Centenarian Quaker, Mrs. E. Hanbury, viii. 421 Centenarian voters, vi. 366