Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/317

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
INDEX.
453

n. 1; 260, n. 3; 265 and n. 1; 289, n. 2; 366, n. 3.

Butter, refuses to come, 215 and n. 1.

By-bets, 370 and n. 1.

Byfield, Adoniram, 353 and n. 3.

Cabal, or Cabbala, 25 and n. 1.

Cabals, Committees of, 365 and n. 3.

Cacus, the robber, 152, n. 1.

Cadmus, the fable of, 65, n. 1.

Cæsar, had a horse with corns on his toes, 21 and n. 2; stirrups not in use in his time, 21, n. 3; alluded to, 55, n. 2; death of, 241 and n. 2.

Calamy (the Presbyterian preacher), exhortations of, 65, n. 2; 353 and n. 1. Caldesed, 254 and n. 3.

Caliban, 278.

Caligula, Emperor, 409 and n. 1; boasted of embracing; the moon, 269, n. 2.

Callêches, 362 and n. 2.

Cambay, the Prince of, his offensive breath, 164.

Camilla of Virgil's Æneid, alluded to, 89, n. 3.

Camisado, 387, n. 4.

Cannon-ball, 230 and n. 2.

Cant, derivation of the word, 358 and n. 3.

Capel, Lord, 43, n. 2.

Caperdewsie, 166 and n. 3.

Capoched, 194; means hood-winked, 194, n. 2.

Caps, black, lined with white, 124 and n. 3.

Carazan, a province of Tartary, curious custom in, 43, n. 1.

Carberry, the Earl of, Butler appointed Secretary to, preface, 8.

Cardan, belief of, 249; particulars respecting, 249, n. 5.

Carneades, the Academic, 6, n. 4.

Carriers' packs and bells, 341 and n. 4.

Carroches, 210, 402 and n. 2.

Carte's Life of Ormonde, 422, n. 4.

Carvajal, Peter and John, 276, n. 1,

Case, the Presbyterian minister, sermons of, 61, n. 1; 326, n. 4; 353 and n. 1.

Cassiopeia's Chair, 217 and n. 3.

Catasta, 145; a cage or prison, 145, n. 5.

Cats, worshipped by the Egyptians, 34, n. 7.

Catterwauling tricks, 292.

Cautery, the use of, 309 and n. 1.

Centaurs, the, 315 and n. 2.

Cerberus, wears three heads, 355.

Cerdon, the one-eyed cobbler, 58 and n. 6; 89, 95, 104, 108.

Ceruse, 158 and n. 5.

Cervantes, dignity of, preface, 23.

Chærephon, 224 and n. 5.

Chair, the stercorary, 128, n. 2.

Chaldean Conjurors, 250 and n. 6.

Chameleons, said to live on air, 137, n. 3,

Chancery-practice, the common forms of, 187 and n. 6.

Charlatan, a quack doctor, 366 and n. 2.

Charles I., war between, and the Parliament, 31, n. 2; his political and natural person, 62, n. 5; 68, n. 4; Members ordered to be prosecuted by, 63, n. 4; his treaties with the rebel army, 177, n. 2; sale of his estates, 328, n. 5.

Charles II., speech of, 30, n. 4; treatment of, 123.

Charms, maladies cured by, 223 and n. 3.

Cheats and Impostors, artifices of, 210 and n. 1; defeated of their aim, 332 and n. 4.

Cheek by joul, 140 and n. 2.

Cheese, where to cut it, 126 and n. 4.

Cheshire, remonstrance of the gentlemen of, to Parliament, 126, n. 5.

Chevy Chase, song of, quoted, 89, n. 1.

Chickens, counting them before they are hatched, 251 and n. 2.

Children, frightening of, 372 and n. 3.