NINTH SERIES.
15
Brummel (Beau) and Barbey d'Aurevilly, ix. 96.
Burton (R.) on tobacco, ii. 454. Byroniana, v. 460.
" Cambuscan bold,"iii. 318. Canouse, its meaning,
vii. 329. "Carnage is God's daughter," iii. 37.
" Caved in," iii. 385. Cedar trees, ii. 290. ' Cele-
brities and I,' xi. 416. Cellini and Shakespeare,
ix. 417. Charley in popular rimes, x. 68. Charm,
old, ix. 49, 257. Chaucer, doubtful passages in,
vii. 190. Chewar, the, viii. 409. Childerpox, v.
235, 424. Children's affirmations, ix. 185. Christ-
mas decorations and Shrove Tuesday, ix. 86. Christ-
mas weather-lore, xi. 285. Church, its gender, vi.
435 ; smallest in England, ix. 431. Cinnamon of
the ancients, iv. 329. City of the Violet Crown, xi.
433. Clough, Cleugh, or Cliffe, iii. 191. Cluzzom,
its meaning, vi. 506. Coffee made of malt, xii. 191.
Comically, ix. 371. Corn-crake, iii. 474. Cowslip,
its local names, ii. 1 92. Crabs' eyes as medicine, v.
486. " Cradel grass," ix. 491. Creak, its meaning,
vi. 298. Crocus nudiflorus in England, i. 313.
Crossing knives and forks, ix. 357 ; xi. 156.
Culamite = Dissenter, i. 276. Cutlers' poetry, posies,
and mottoes, vi. 2S5. Cyclealities, xi. 162. Dairy
windows, xi. 155. Daniel (Samuel), his ' Sonnets
to Delia," iv. 170. Danish place-names in Cheshire,
iv. 442. Darley, a forgotten Irish poet, ix. 377.
D'Aulnoy (Comtesse), and the microphone, iii. 397.
"Delivered from the galling yoke of time," xi. 511.
"Demon's aversion, iii. 375. Detached sheet, vii.
433. Devil as a black dog, ii. 336. Devil's door,
iv. 178, 313. " Dewy-feathered," ii. 117. Dickens-
iana : phrase of Mrs. Gamp, ix. 172. " Different
than," i. 172 ; x. 275. Earth mother, ix. 176.
Editors, their evolution, v. 166, 425. Egg, standing,
ii. 53, 132. Eggs, their price, ix. 278. Elliott
(Ebenezer), x. 445. English accent, vii. 15. 'English
Dialect Dictionary,' xi. 486. Epitaphs, iii. 53, 415.
Erlik Khan, v. 486. Fair and making fair, viii. 47.
February fill-dyke, v. 277. Fetlocked, x. 29. Field-
names, ii. 352; v. 396. Fir-cone in heraldry, i.
413. Fitzgerald (E.), two early poems, iv. 16.
FitzGerald (E.), his 'Omar Khayyam,' iii. 395.
Flower game, viii. 466. Folk-lore of child-birth,
xii. 413. Folks, xi. 438 ; xii. 50. Fond, its mean-
ings, ii. 34. Footprints of gods, vi. 391. Forty
pounds a year in Goldsmith's day, xi. 393. Fox
names, vii. 78. Frail, its meaning, v. 51. French
proverb, ii. 513. Friday superstition, vii. 412.
Frisbie surname, iii. 391. Furlong, xi. 35. Gate,
tavern sign, iii. 216. Genius, its definition, xi. 512.
Gerard (John), iii. 164. Ghosts and suicides, v. 288.
Gillyflower, midsummer, iii. 12. Gin palaces, xii.
378. Gipsy wedding, vii. 45. Gloucester (Hum
phrey, Duke of), iii. 357. Glyndyfrdwy, its deriva-
tion, iii. 6, 156. " Go about," ii. 198. Good after-
noon, xi. 58. "Good lines, "commercial phrase, iv.
53. Goths and Huns, xi. 253. Gow, its meaning,
iv. 78. Grass of Parnassus, ii. 208. " Green-eyed
monster," v. 295. Gwyneth, ix. 819, 372. Hawker
MSiS., iv. 232. Heartsease, ix. 393, 493. Hebrew
incantations, x. 78. Heer-breeads, its meaning, iv.
468. Heidelberg gallery, xii. 454. Helpmate and
helpmeet, ii. 185, 453 ; iii. 196. Henbane, iv. 226,
310. Hickory, its etymology, iii. 124. " Hill me
up," iii. 436. floast : Whoost, i. 337. Holy Com-
munion, iii. 427. "Hook it," xii. 33. Hopeful:
sanguine, x. 10. Horse-chestnut, ii. 94. Housen,
iv. 278. Howk=to pull up, iv. 385. Howl, its
derivation, iv. 49. ' Hue and Cry,' ii. 335. Huit-
son family, 'vii. 314. Hunt (Leigh), viii. 130.
Hurry =staith, vi. 70. Hymn, child's, ir. 197.
' Hymns Ancient and Modern,' viii. 101 ; ix. 36.
I printed with small letter, xii. 231. Image, bleed-
ing, in Dublin, iv. 528. Implement, domestic, i.
367. Indicible, use of the word, v. 477. Infant
Saviour, xii. 115. " Interlunar cave," ii. 509.
Inundate, its pronunciation, vi. 52. Irish saying on
Michaelmas Day, x. 434. It, viii. 242. Journalistic
errors, vii. 230. Jullaber, Kentish hill, v. 403. Keats's
' Ode to a Nightingale,'xi. 372. " Keep your hair on,"
x. 279. Key and kay, its pronunciation, iii. 472.
Kids = children, i. 57. " Kings ! " boys' term, iii. 28.
King's Champion, xii. 254. Knife, ix. 468. Knife
superstition, xi. 53. Ladies and Leap Year, v. 479.
Ladle, a, viii. 292. " Lady of the mere," vii. 396.
Lafontaine's ' Oies de Frere Phillippe,' vi. 58.
Lanes, sunken, iv. 336. " Lanted ale," vii. 75.
"LesGrdces," game, v. 459. Lewes (G. H.) and
Locke, iii. 173. "Like one o'clock," vi. 306.
Living dead, xii. 97. Llyn Coblynau : Knockers'
Llyn, ix. 353. Long Mynd, Shropshire, vi. 306.
Loriot, vi. 396. Louijos, sonnet by, vi. 28. Lupo-
mannaro, xi. 95. Maiden applied to a married
woman, xi. 232,. Mallet or mullet, x. 93. Man
disguised as woman, vii. 358. Marriage gift, v. 112.
Mary, Queen of Scots, i. 155, 234. Mead and
obarni, iii. 413. ' Medical Works of Fourteenth
Century,' iii. 324. " Medicus et pollinctor," i. 315.
Melek Taus, v. 482. Men wearing earrings, v.
191 ; vii. 192. ' Merchant of Venice,' V. i.,
x. 224, 283. Meresteads or mesesteads, x. 53.
Messiter, surname, vii. 29. Middlin', iv. 495.
Milton's ' Morning of Christ's Nativity,' xi, 88 ;
xii. 56. Misquotations, x. 428 ; xi. 93, 275.
Mitre, the, x. 370. Morcom, surname, iv. 467. Morley
(George), his ' Shakespeare's Greenwood,' vi. 407.
Morning glory, a flower, vii. 209. Morris (William)
as a man of business, vi. 436 ; vii. 54. Mounds,
moated, vi. 77, 253. Mountain ash, iv. 26. Mug,
the verb, xii. 231. Mumbudget, its meaning, iv.
251. Nang-nails : nubbocks, ix. 52. Napoleon's
last years, x. 15. Newspaper cuttings changing
colour, xi. 491. Nineveh as an English place-name,
viii. 185. "No great shakes," iii. 277. None, iv.
544. Nothing, xi. 395. Nunty, its meaning, vii.
291. Nursery rimes, vii. 18. Ny nd, its meaning, i.
493. and its pronunciation, x. 134. Oak, the ash,
and the ivy, xii. 492. Oakapple Day, ii. 76. Odd
numbers, vii. 227. Off for of, iv. 1 71. Old Jeffrey :
Prince Thames, xi. 396. " Only too thankful," ix.
370. Opodeldoc, ix. 166. Orange blossoms, x. 94.
Oranges, xii. 295. O'thaughnessy (Arthur), iii. 225.
Oxford Street, x. 436. Palatinate, vi. 256. Palm
wine, iv. 497. Parlour, viii. 25. Partitive, construc-
tion with, i. 96. Peas, pease, and peasen, iii. 95. Peeler,
xi. 415. Periwinkle, x. 236. Perspective, historic,
ii. 10. Petar or petard, x. 312. Pett (Peter), ix.
298. ' Pickwickian Manners and Customs,' ii. 76.
Picts and Scots, vi. 90. Pigeon cure, v. 343. Pig-
iii. 136.
killing, vi. 426. Pillatery, plant-name,
2