Notes and Queries, July 27, 1907.
INDEX.
529
Dunheved on "taping shoos," 498
Durand (Col. C. J.) on Napoleon's carriage, 313
Scotch Garden of Eden, 162
West Indian military records, 156 Durham (E.) on Chavasse family, 150 Dutch words, incorrect translation into English, 346 Button and Seaman families, 266 Duynkerkers, inscribed on Delft jar, 309 Dyce's 'Skelton,' Bothambar, Bootham Bar, 165 Dyche (Thomas), his dictionary, 307 E. (C.) on Charles I., 169 E. (K. P. D.) on image of the Blessed Virgin, 9
Obsolete English games, 512
" Sham Abraham," 469 E. (L.) on Tristan and Isolde, 50 E. (S. I.) on slavery in England, 176 Eagles (John) and ' Penrose's Journal,' 148, 216, 277 Earl's Court, great wheel at, 406, 473, 515 Earl's eldest son and supporters, 332 Earthquakes and Mont Pelde, 346 East Anglia, and Virginian settlers, 329, 412 ; wooden
cups in, 489
Easter plays in Cumberland, 30 Ebsworth (J. W.) on First-footing, A.D. 1907, 5
^Scott (David), K.8.A., 186 Echidna, mythological monster, 356 Eden, Scotch Garden of, 162 Edgcumbe (R.) on Mezzofanti : Jeremiah Curtin, 6
Shakespeare's residence New Place, 66 'Edinburgh Review,' 1810, attack on Oxford, 128,
175, 190 Edinburgh stage, Bland and Glover families, 89, 131,
191, 354
Editor, use of the word author for, 226, 475 Editorial :
A sable cloud turns forth her silver lining, 60
"As much virtue as could die," 280
Barbadoes, the verb, 380
" Blessings beyond hope or thought," 40
Catholic and Roman Catholic, 180
Coke pronounced Cook, 380
Coldharbour, 200
Four Alls or Five Alls, 180
" I expect to pass through this world but once," 140
Kelty (Mary Ann), 300
Land-waiter, its meaning, 40
Lilith, Adam's first wife, 340
Music in England in Shakespeare's time, 360
Netting-mokes, 260
"O ye who patiently explore," 200
Parson's nose, 420
Peacock feathers unlucky, 240
Petty France, 120
Postage stamps first perforated, 320
" Ships that pass in the night," 200
Sidesmen's duties, 500
Snakes in Iceland or Ireland, 80
"So long," 160
" Straight is the line of duty," 140
" The hand that rocks the cradle," 140
" Tho' nature, red in tooth and claw," 40
" Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner, " 400
'Ulalume,' by Poe, 40
"When late I attempted your pity to move," 460
" Who shall decide when doctors disagree," 220
Year-date, double, GO
Edward I., his daughter Eleanor, her pedigree, 229
Edward IV., his wooing at Grafton, 27
Eleanor, daughter of Edward I., her pedigree, 229
Eleanor of Castile, her tomb, 8, 57, 257
Election of Chancellor of Oxford, voting papers, 326
Eliot (George) and Charles Dickens, 13
Ell (H. G.) on Ell family, 163
Ell family, 163
Ellis (A. S.) on St. George : 455
Ellis (R.) on Wordsworth's primrose, 28
Elm, Great Hollow, at Hampstead, 234
Elmfield House, Teddington, pictures of Sibyls at, 88, 136, 194
Elshie on Scott's Black Dwarf,' 168
Ely House or Albemarle House, Dover Street, 268, 312
Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln's, 1863, 41
Embo baronetcy mysteries, 246, 315, 372
Engine house, octagonal, on Hampstead Heath, its demolition, 424, 513
Engineers, portraits of, 347, 514
England (E. B.) on Dubourdieu and England families, 110
England and Dubourdieu families, 110
England, Victor Hugo's property in, 33 ; Latin pro- nunciation in, 108, 170, 294; slavery in, 1764, 149, 176 ; earliest instance of beheading, 487
English, Californian, 36, 136, 154, 197
English canonized saints, 497
English Catholic on Queen Victoria of Spain, 76
English spelling, its reform, 51
Enigma on musical genius, 170
Enniskilling, Inniskilling, spelling of the name, 269
Enquirer on badges of the City guilds, 347 Charters to City guilds, 347
Epigrams :
Era quarto, e poi fit terzo, 506 Greek, 297
He first was fourth and then was third, 506 L'autre jour, au fond d'un vallon, 246, 297 O Charidas, what is there down below, 228, 274, 412
Epitaphs :
Admiral Christ. 38, 475
Affliction sore, 137
As much virtue as could die,' 280
Blest was the prophet in his heavenly shade, 267
Bone Deus, 29
Death creeps Abought on hard, 423, 516
From rageing storms at sea, 38, 475
Greek, 387, 436
Henry Abbot dead, 113
Here lieth the body of Samuel Tyler, 423, 516
Here lieth ye body of Robert Bideel. 423, 516
Here lyeth Interred the body of lohn Benbow
Esq., 116
Quse linquam, aut nihil, aut nihili, 387, 436 Stay, passenger, and contemplate, 76 Tho' boreas blasts, and neptune waves, 38, 475 'Tis gone with its thorns and its roses, 5 What things I leave are nought, 387, 436 What we say of a thing that has just come in
fashion, 27
Eques auratus, English equivalent of the term, 109 " Erasmus Rogers " in Acton's ' Lectures on Modern
History,' 487 Erbury (W.), his Scourge for the Assirian,' 208, 373