TENTH SEKIES.
265
Smugglers' caves, v. 282
Smuggling, churches used for, xi. 129, 238
Smyrna, " High Life," shop sign in, xi. 305, 418
Smyth (Clement), Fellow of Oriel College, 1446, i. 202
Smyth (E. C.) on Beauchamp of Somersetshire, ix. 55. Envelopes, i. 57, 134. Fastolf (Sir John), iv. 145 ; vi. 77. Goodwin Sands : Lomea Island, ix. 234. Fitz Urse (Reginald), y. 112. Links with the past, i. 414. Portfolio Society, x. 53. Post boxes, vi. 453. Post Office, 1856-1906, vi. 251, 315. Shakespeare's 1 Virtue of Necessity,' i. 76
Smyth (H.) on " Before one can say Jack Robin- son," xi. 318. Comether, xi. 417. Cumber- land dialect, iv. 169. Frieze, vii. 316. Hales- owen, Worcestershire, vii. 470. Irish ejacula- tory prayers, i. 337. Moon folk-lore, i. 395. Moral standards of Europe, ii. 257. Palm Sunday : Fig Sunday, ix. 374. Rushlights, x. 353. Spelling changes, vii. 273. Statues in the British Isles, xii. 51. Vaccination and inocu- lation, ii. 394
Smyth (H. J.) on " Jack Tar, have you heard ? " iv. 506
Smyth (J. T. ) on quotations wanted, iv. 468
Smythies (H. M. G.), novelist, i. 87
Snail-eating and gipsies, x. 69, 134
Snaith, Peculiar Court of, marriage licences, iv. 267, 334
Snakes : dying at sunset, i. 168, 253, 333 ; in South Africa, v. 428, 473 ; vi. 10, 115, 152, 294 ; vii. 10, 115, 152, 218, 294, 258 ; in Iceland or Ireland, vii. 80 ; drinking milk, x. 265, 316, 335, 377, 418 ; xi. 157,. 336 ; generated out of human brains, xi. 506 ; com- mitting suicide, xii. 228, 277
Snakes, crayfish, and onions, x. 448
Sneegum or Sneezum surname, xii. 206
Sneezing superstition, xi. 7, 117, 173 ; xii.
97, 178 Sneezum or Sneegum surname, xii. 206
Snell(F. S.)onBaughan: Boffin, xii. 292. Cock- foster, x. 253. Court of Requests, xii. 257. Cowhouse Manor, Middlesex, xii. 234. Epi- taphs : their bibliography, iii. 371. Farm held three centuries, iv. 247. ' Genius by Counties,' iv. 474. Place, vi. 93. St. George's Chapel Yard, viii. 371. Triple chancel arches, xii. 255
Snodgrass (A. E.) on dolls in magic, x. 196. Snodgrass as a surname, x. 216
Snodgrass (W. G.) on Snodgrass as a surname, x. 11
Snodgrass as a surname, ix. 427; x. 10, 52, 113,
216
Snooty, slang term, vi. 449 Snow and early cleaning, ix. 210 Snow rime in Yorkshire, i. 392, 511 Snowball family, i. 137 Snowe (Richard), Rector of SS. Anne and Agnes,
vi. 30
Snowte, meaning of the word, iii. 88, 137 Snuff-box, gold, belonging to Dean Swift, ii. 249,
'L. .
Snuff-boxes, leather, v. 296
Snuff-Mill estate, Homerton, ix. 50, 496
Soap-making in 1641, x. 357
Soap-making patent, Sir Richard Weston's, viii.
509 ; ix. 98 Sobersides, character in seventeenth-century
play, vi. 450 Sobieski family, ix. 28, 235, 318
Sobriquets and nicknames of the eighteenth
century, vii. 366, 430; viii. 37, 114, 290;
x. 174 ; xii. 515. See Nicknames.
Society for Propagation of the Gospel, its origin,
iii. 324
Society ladies, magazine articles on, v. 469, 514 Society of Antiquaries, its foundation, ii. 237 Society of Artists, 1772, xi. 427 Society of Coach-drivers, 1765, ii. 96 Society of Fine Arts and Queen's Hall, e. 1875,
xi. 229 Soga, Welsh word, its use and meaning, vi. 167,
216
Soldiers condemned to death by lot, i. 366, 476 Soledadilla, Spanish verse-form, vi. 25 Solloway (J.) on the meaning of Ainsty, ii. 25 Solomons (Israel) on Ben Meir's Chronicles, xi. 318. Catzius (Josias), iv. 10. Chamberlain (Commodore), x. 329, 437. Cooper = Franks, ix. 250. Dighton's caricature portraits, xii. 409. Estevens (David), ix. 409. Etough (Henry), xii. 430. " Fernandes in Dukes Place," xi. 49. Gordon (Mrs.), nee Isabella Levy, xi. 48. In- quisition and Jews, x. 288. Jew King, ix. 428. Jewish queries, ix. 387. ' Light for the Jews,' ix. 230. Lopez (Sir Menasseh Massey), Bt., ix. 508. Meschianza, x. 30. Moloker, Yiddish term, x. 435. Philadelphia (Jacob), x. 89, 293. Purim token : Cabbage Society, viii. 368. Reid (William Hamilton), xi. 328. Shylock tract, 1607, ix. 269 ; xi. 456. Strasburg (B. Wolff Lazarson), xi. 348. Villa Real (Mrs. C. da Costa), viii. 328. Villa Real (Elizabeth Sarah), ix. 229. ' Whimsical Depository,' ix. 510. Willme (J.), xi. 469
Sombre (Dyce) and the Begum Sumroo, i. 14, 68 Somerford (H.) on Thomas Somerford, xi. 489 Somerford (Thomas) of Westminster, 1741, xi. 489 Somerill (T.) on Saxon kings : living descendants,
v. 189
Somers (Sir George), 1554-1610, memorial to, x. 28 Somerset, North- West, sketches of, v. 250 Somerset dialect : " Vibrate," ' Wrangling,"
i. 6
Somersetshire, Christmas custom in, iii. 86, 236 Somersetshire dialect phrases, viii. 246 ' Somersetshire Parishes,' county bibliography,
iv. 57
Somersetshire records, iii. 464 Somersetshire whipping, c. 1747, allusion to,
vi. 208
Somerville, twentieth Baron, i. 508 Somerville on Bidding Prayer, iii. 168 Son, disobedient, legend of, x. 408 Son, ungrateful, Japanese story, ix. 466 Songs, French burdens to English, ii. 267
Songs and Ballads :
A man ran away with the monument, ii. 374 A tailor called on me, and, scraping his legs,
xi. 44
Abraham Newland, ix. 37, 417 Address to Poverty, i. 43, 151 Admiral Benbow, vii. 7 All my troubles disappear, xi. 44 Alonzo the Brave, viii. 169, 253 Amonge the woonderous works of God, xi.
147
And he was a Samaritan, xii. 46, 177 Arms of Abraham, iv. 409 Attend, ye gay dames, to the tale I am telling,
v. 184 Auld Lang Syne, viii. 85