Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 7.djvu/543

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SUBJECT INDEX. 535 Notes and Queries, July 28,1913. Snnctus bell at St. John's College, Cambridge, 381 Sandal tree and axe compared to benevolent man, 60 Sanderson (Sir V.) and Samuel Pepys, 508 Sandridge, Surrey place-name, 70 Saracenic speech, its relation to Provencal, 47 " Saraft," meaning of the word, 138 Sarcophagi, Jewish, in Rome, 429 " Scaling the hennery," meaning of the phrase, 110, 354 Scarborough, St. Mary's Church attached to a monastic order, 348, 396 Schaak (J. S. C.), 1706, artist, his nationality, 457 Schools, private, in fiction, 489 Schopenhauer (Arthur) at Wimbledon, 1800, 90, 136 Schutz family, companions of George I., 268, 334 " Scolopendra cetacea," its modern name, 347 410, 517 Scott (Dred) and Chief Justice Taney, 446 Scott (Mus), author of plays, c. 1810, 238, 315 396 Scott (Sir Walter), a misquotation, 7 ; text oi ' Kenilworth,' 16 ; " Lochow " in his ' Legend of Mi mtrose,' 29, 95; his use of the word " mutate," 145, 258, 352 ; his friend Stanhope, 400 ; the Rota Club in ' Woodstock,' 425, 493 Seal belonging to a Nottingham banker, 489 Seals of Thomas, Marquis of Dorset, 18 Searancke (T.), Cambridge graduate, 1678, 50 Secret service, from accounts, 1794-1829, 17 " Serendipity," origin and meaning of the word, 400 Sermon on Good Friday, payment for, 9 Sermon register of Welland, 1809-28, 104, 295 SeVigne^ (Madame de), her chateau " Les Rochers," 128 " Sex horns somno," epigram, 71, 136, 256 .Shakespeare (W.), earliest reference to First Folio, 8, 56, 94, 137, 217; the text of the Sonnets, 32, 70, 153, 236 ; "a part of the Bible," 146, 494 his use of the word " castle," 165, 253, 304 hit bust, 168 ; Milton's epitaph on, 227, 456 Mr. W. H. of his Sonnets, 241, 262 ; mythical pall-bearer, 245 ; his monument in Westminster Abbey, 349; Second Folio, 456 Shakespeariana:— 1 Hamlet,' I. ii., " Then saw you not his face ? " 306 '1 Henry IV.,' I. i. 5, 6, "entrance," 66; II. ii., robbery on Gadshill, 305 ' Love's Labour 's Lost,' IV. i., " Put up this, it will be thine another day," 7 ' Taming of the Shrew,' Induction, " Brach Merriman," 205 ' Twelfth Night,' I. v., " comptible," 286 Shark, etymology of the word, 191 " Sharpshin," name for small coin, 206. 273 Sheffield, cholera monument, 90 Sheffield plate, mentioned in letters, 1781, 485 Shen-stone (W.), hb epitaph, 387 Shenton, place-name in Devon, 70 Shepley family of Mil-field, epitaphs on, 265 Sheridan (R. B.), his ' School for Scandal,' 126, 231; first editions of his plays, 228 Hhippen (Margaret), Mrs. Arnold, her burial- place, 370 Shorthand Society, commenced 1720, 308, 374 Sibbering family, 229 " Sick," use of the word, 247 ' Siege of Acre, Great Historical Picture of the,' 227, 292 Sign : Dripping-Pan, 447, 518 Signs of the fifteen last days of the world, 26(5, 352 Signs of old London, " Gold Lion," 67 Silkworm's thread " tearing down bulwarks," 9J " Silverwood," meaning of, in ballads, 250 Simnel (Lambert), c. 1486, hU identity, 129, 194,

  • '50 292

Simon (Richard), c. 1486, his identity, 129, 194, 256, 292 Simpson (Dr.) and Dr. Locock, their identity, 170, 232 Simson (R.), his ' Treatise concerning Porisms,' 189 Sintram and Verena, characters in fiction, 449, 514 " Skimmity-ridi.'," old Wessex practice, 388 " Skyveyns," meaning of the word, 107, 175 Smith (Albert), entitled to bear arms, 410, 476 Smith (J.F.), Sir John Gilbert, and 'The London Journal,' 221, 276. 297, 373 Smith (Rev. John) of Enniakillen, c. 1652, 509 Smith (Richard), Royal Verderer, c. 1745, 429 Smith (Sydney) and L.C.C. tablets, 327, 377 Smith family of Wroughton, Wilts, 287 Smuggling poems, references to, 309, 355, 491 •Snake and child, poem from ' The Playmate,' 308, 354 " Snowdrop," earliest use of the name, 1633, 385 Solly (Edward), and ' The Dunciad,' 68 Somerset (Earldom of) in Mohun family, 130, IPO, 215 Somerville (William), 1735, poet, 7, 138, 278 Songs and Ballads: — And I have worn your clothing, and I have ridden your steed, 250 If thou axe where I comes fra', 289, 352 Oh ! a hos-marine upon the deck was prancin', Revenge, ballad of the, 8 Smuggling songs, 309, 355, 494 [To] the village that skirted the sea, 355 Vicar of Bray, 149, 215 We smuggling boys are merry boys, 356 Southey (R.). his MS. obituary of Surtee?, 30; his schoolfellows at Westminster, 289 Spaniards' fight with English whaler, 1805, 285 'Speeches and Prayers of the Regicides, 301, 341, 383, 442, 502 Spencer (Herbert), his patent paper-clip, 190 Spenser (E.) and St. Bridget's Bower, 150, 231 Sport of kings, origin of the phrase, 7, 138, 278 " Spot "=stain or besmirch in epitaph, 1052, 446 " Square," in " four square humours," 287, 354 Square in London, the largest, 470 Stamford, parish registers printed, 148 'Stamford Mercury,' earliest copies of, 365, 430, Stanley Grove, Mortlake, engraving of, 410 Stanhope ( ), Sir WalterScott's friend, 409 Stanhope (Langdale), Oxford graduate, 1728, 110 Stapleton (Brigadier Walter) at Battle of Cul- loden, d. 1746, 309 " Star," Broad Green, Croydon, 428 " Star-vpointing," in Milton's epitaph on Shake- speare, 227, 456 State Papers, Ireland, Calendar of, 1670 to 1705, 288 Statues: in the British Isles, 64, 144, 175, 263, 320, 313, 442 ; in Queen Square, Bloomsbury, 425 Stedman (J.), sen., Westminster scholar, 309