Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 3.djvu/531

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Notes and Queries, July 29. 1911.


I N D E X.


525


Quotations :

A Scot and a Jesuit hand in hand, 147, 177, 233 A touch of the sun for pardon, 48, 92, 196 Adds fresh beauties to the spring, 468 Affection never to be weaned nor changed,

388

After snow the snowdrop, 409, 474 And Capel and Hurst, 468 And God did bless him, if the prayers and

tears, 348

And nonsense shall be eloquence in love, 468 And now a poet's gratitude you see, 468 As I was walking all alone, I heard two

corbies, 69 As we journey through life, let us live by

the way, 228, 274, 313

Beatitude rion est divinorum cognitio, 136 Captives of thy bow and spear, 29, 76 Close following Love into my house, 128 Cruel of heart were they, bloody of hand,

129, 191

Each spangled back (sunbird), 69 Envy, eldest born of Hell, 468 Farewell, sweet bird 1 Thou still hast been, 69 Fortune came smiling to his youth and woo'd

it, 15

God help the poor, 329 God made the country, and man made the

town, 126

God moves in a mysterious way, 10, 58, 153 Goe, little booke ; God send thee good

passage, 207, 492

Good reader, I this little booke, 147, 177 Guess now who holds thee, 409, 454 I knew not what it was to die, 388 I said, Let me walk in the fields, 329 In good sooth, my masters, this is no door, 348 In the house of too much trouble he is happy

and at rest, 248 Industria res parvae crescunt, 409, 454

KCUp<j) doV\VlV TOi>S 5oKOVVTO.S &p^iV, 253, 372

Le grain de muse qui parfume le monde, 129 Let us go hence, my songs, 128, 155, 177 Like violets, sweetest in decay, 409, 454 Little by little the time goes by, 329, 377 Midway the road of our life's term they met,

48

Musice mentis medicina mcestae, 46 No charity but alms aught values she, 409,

456, 498 Not 'neath the domes where crumbling arch

and column, 128

Now sound ye forth with trumpet tone, 329 O, never question curiously, 48 On cause mieux quand on ne dit pas, Causons,

Out of the waspish word " No" to pluck the

sting, 147

Qui fallit in poculis fallit in omnibus, 128 Say, weary bird, whose level flight (crow), 69 Schicksal und eigene Schuld, 407 Securitas est tutissimum bonum, 465 Si tu recta facis, ne cures verba malorum, 355 Smug and silver Trent, 468 Sometimes a noble failure is better than an

assured success, 228 Speckled, mellow-throated thrush, 69 Swallows sitting on the eaves, 69 Sweet thrush, whose wild untutored strain, 69 That man is thought a dangerous knave,

367, 452 The bee and spider by a diverse power, 228


Quotations:

The captain's little daughter took her father

by the hand, 147, 177 The only throb it gives, 409, 454 The penalty of not taking an interest, 29 The Scipios' tomb contains no ashes now, 15 The swallow, the swallow, she does with her

bring, 69 The trees began to whisper, and the wind

began to roll, 15, 57 There, 'tis the etiquette, the winners, 329,

377, 438 Thou shrill proclaimer of the lonely hour

(owl), 69

Unholy is the voice, 15 Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze,

409, 454 Welcome, dear swallow, to thy well-known

nest, 69

Welcome to the British shore, 468 When house and land are gone and spent, 46S When Nature makes a man a king, 147 When she was good, 128, 234, 271, 333, 438


R. (A. F.) on " capping " at Scottish Universities,

386

Elizabeth (Queen), her horses' names, 346 Indian aerial post, 265 May celebrations at Oxford in 1598, 325 Rhinoceros, first, in England, 286 R. (C. K.) on Samuel George Sloman, 108 R. (G. W. E.) on Ananias as Christian name, 453 Arter (Andrew), his memorial, 75 Essex as Christian name, 339 " George Inn " at Woburn, 172 R. (J. F.) on Queen Elizabeth's portrait with

Italian proverb, 487 R. (J. H.) on John Brick, 409

R. (L. G.) on dogs on brasses and stone effigies, 311 R. (L. M.) on inscriptions in churches and church- yards, 57

R. (W. W.) on authors of quotations wanted, 48 R's of sailors, meaning of the term, 57 Radcliffe (Rev. Stephen), d. 1732, his biography,

147

Radcliffe (W.) on fishing in classical times, 249 Rags left at holy wells, 409, 470, 498 ' Raigne of King Edward III.,' " dare a falcon,

468 Raikes (Robert), Sunday-school pioneer, marriage

of his parents, 366 Raleigh (Sir Walter), his servant, and tobacco,

34, 175 4 Ralph Roister Doister,' play by Udal, 367, 413,

454, 496

Ramsay (Allan) and Thomas D'Urfey, 467 Raphael, his century of sonnets, 208, 297, 353 Ratcliffe (T.) on bee-swarms, 406

Christmas bough : Christmas bush, 14

Corn and dishonesty, 57

Cuckoo rimes, 465

Ear-piercing, 235

Gallows Bank : Matthew Cockling, 187

" Great George our King," 387

Goulands, in Ben Jonson, 136

Harvest superstitions : judgments on impiety,

278

Litany : spitting and stamping the feet, 295 Owns : blithering, 214