Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - General Index.djvu/231

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TENTH SEKIES.


223


Queen's Westminsters and St. Margaret's Church,

i. 363

Quelpaert Island, origin of the name, i. 265 Quenington, Gloucestershire, Knights Hospital- lers at, iii. 489 ; iv. 36

Quens or Kuens, derivation of the word, vi. 170 Quentery or Quaintry family, iii. 289 Quentin (Mrs.), and Georgian notabilities, viii.

230, 277 Querard (J. M.), his ' Supercheries litt^raires de-

voil^es,' x. 81

Querist on Cavalier songs, vi. 269. ' Honest broker," ii. 369. Kings and queens compared, v. 389. " Kingsley's Stand," vii. 109. Monk (General) and his portrait, vi. 349 Quero on Tai-Ping War, ix. 349 Quesnel (Pierre), portraits by, i. 8 Queue, use of the word in English, ii. 77 Quice or quest = wood-pigeon, i. 126, 194 Quick (R.) on Chatterton portrait, viii. 309 Quick-born children, i. 281 Quicks Wood, Clothall, and Earl of Sahsoury, x.

308

Quidnunc II. on vivandieres, ix. 171 Quietists in England, xii. 210 Quill on rood-lofts, vi. 267. Tudor spelt Tidder,

xii. 78

Quillan or Quillin surname and arms, iv. 206, 253 Quillin (B. Lord M.) on Comte d'Antraigues, x. 152. Heraldry in Froissart : pillow, x. 369, Waldock family, x. 78

Quilt, use and meaning of the word, vii. 244 Quin (James), memorial at Bath, ii. 185 Quince family, vi. 8

Quinoe and mulberry folk-lore, iv. 386, 438 ; v. 15 Quinn (J. H.) on " Don Saltero's Tavern," Chel- sea, x. 110

Quintain, obsolete English game, vii. 403 Quirinus on con- contraction, ii. 427 ; iii. 250. ' Gentle " Shakespeare, iii. 292. Tarleton and the sign of " The Tabor," iii. 7 Quivel or Quinel (Peter), Bishop of Exeter," x. 30,

112, 215 ' Quiz, The,' 1797, on Goldsmith, iii. 49, 152

Quotations :

A certain old lady in Babylon bred, ix. 175 A crank is a little thing that makes revolu- tions, ii. 49

A face to lose youth for, i. 168, 217 A flower which once, vi. 140 A glut of pleasure, i. 168 A glutted tiger, mangling in his lair, x. 388 A little way to walk with you, my own, vi.

229

A long day's journey there lay before, vii. 89 A long while ago, when the world first began;

ix. 328

A maiden's dreaming, iv. 509 A moth-eaten rag on a worm-eaten pole, vi.

108

A mountain huge upreared, i. 468 A not-expected, much unwelcome guest, i. 468 A pagan suckled in a creed outworn, iv. 460 A peacock on every wall, iv. 468 A poet's art, x. 188 A poor thing, but mine own, v. 100 A present dans les cieux, ix. 129 A primrose by the river's brim, vii. 28 A qua ego nullum confiteor setatis meee tempus

abhorruisse, vii. 309, 374

A rope ! a rope 1 to hang the Pope, x. 384, 434, 496


Quotations :

A rose-red city half as old as Time, iv. 435

A Sabbath well spent, vi. 20, 88

A sable cloud turns forth her silver lining,

vii. 60

A' the sons are carles' sons, xi. 409 A thousand workmen toiled to build Ver- sailles, iii. 487

Accede ad ignem hanc, i. 188 Achilles ponders in his tent, i. 168 Ad rnajorem Dei gloriam, ii. 107, 190 Ad rem et rhombum, i. 188 j9Estivo nunquam conspectus Sydere Glaucus,

x. 127, 270

Ah quam duice est meminisse ! xi. 247 Ah, what avails heroic deeds ? xii. 208 Ah ! why shouldst thou be dead when com- mon men, x. 454

Alas ! for man who has no sense, iv. 68 Aliquid sapidum in fungo, v. 27, 7c Aliudque cupido, Mens aliud suadet, iv. 480 All at her work the village maiden sings, vi.

149

'AXX' oi yap ddv^ovvres, vii. 158 All over loathsome with affectation of the fine

gentleman, vii. 309, 374 All quiet along the Potomac, iv. 230, 297, 354;

viii. 40 All wit doth but avert men from the road,

x. 396

Amice, quisquis es, iii. 128 Amongst the wide waves set, vii. 208, 254 Amor est punctum quoddam stultitise, i. 188 Amoris te vias omnes doceo, i. 188 Ampliat setatis spatium sibi vir bonus, x.

108 An Austrian army awfully arrayed, i. 120,

148, 211, 258, 277, 280 '

An hoary, reverent, and religious man, i. 468 An old lady in Babylon bred, vii. 448 An open foe may prove a curse, ix. 149, 192 An orginal something, fair maid, iv. 529 ;

v. 11

And beauty, born of murmuring sound, ii. 460 And better death than we from high to low,

i. 190, 257 And custom lie upon thee with a weight, viii.

32 And half suspected, animate the whole, x. 28,

74

And has it come to this ? iii. 49, 171 And he thought, with a smile, vi. 149 And he wandered away, x. 408 And in famous Hall of Exeter, vi. 217 And many a smile, v. 208 And morning brings its daylight, ii. 427 And see all sights from pole to pole, xi. 14 And such a yell was there, viii. 428, 475;

517 And the dawn comes up like thunder, v. 389,

417 And there were crystal pools, peopled with

fish, xii. 109

And thine oaken galley, Haco, ix. 128, 214 And thou, blest star of Europe's darkest

hour, iii. 88 And while the priest did eat the people

stared, vii. 309 ; viii. 388 Anglica gens est optima flens, ii. 405 Another nymph, amongst the many fair, x.

156 Anser, apis, vitulus, vi. 94