Quotations :-- Scribenda et legenda, i. 349; ii. 113 Securus judicat orbis terrarum, iv. 148 Self is a subject on which all can be elo- Silent and clear thro' yonder peaceful vale, Sines, tangents, secants, radius, cosines, ii. Small sweet world of wave-encompassed So gracious to the hand she tasked, vi. 190 Sometimes her mouth with deep regret is Somewhere there waiteth in this world of Son of a Duke, brother of a King, iv. 219, Sore plungde in greeuous paynes and woe- Sorry is, then, a part of love, x. 170 Spring in the North. is a child that wakes Still the race of hero spirits, iv. 50, 90 Success is like strong wine, xi. 331 Sweeter woman ne'er drew breath, vi. 335 Taking it out in drink, ii. 487 Ταῦτα θεῶν· ἐν γούνασι κεῖται, ii. 500 Thank God, there is a House of Lords, iv. That blessed word Mesopotamia, ii. 520 That the light of a sun The beauty of the house is order, i. 208 &c., Quotations:— The blackest ink of fate was sure my lot, The child that is born on the Eve of St. The children of man, vi. 336 The common dammed shun his society, xii. The Crusades served to people heaven with The dog that don't know how to bite, iii. The dogs of war are straining at the leash, The earliest pipe of half-awakened birds, The Ethiop gods have Ethiop lips, iv. 135 The great ennobling Past is only then, ii. The heart has many a dwelling place, vii. The heart, the heart is lonely still, ix. 410 The insupportable fatigue of thought, i. 428 The last saraband has been danced in the The law is a ass-a idiot, ix. 112, 159 The most eloquent voice of our century, xii. The most unhappy man of men, i. 428, 495 The nectarine and curious peach, ii. 108, The own arm-chair, iv. 190 will ever There a bit of England is, iv. 162 There are not many happinesses so com- There are three kinds of men, ii. 109, 158 There is so much bad in the best of us, iii. There is, there is one primitive and sure, There let thy bleeding branch atone, viii. There may be heaven: there must be hell, There rolls the deep where grew the tree, There shall be no more snow, ii. 489 There's nothing worth the wear of winning, These are not dead, their spirits never die, These are the souls to which High Valour These nobly played their parts, &c., viii. 491 These the qualities that shine, ii. 48 They shall not grow old. not wither them, xi. 513 Age shall They tell upon St. Bernard's Mount, i. 448 This Indian weed now withered quite, xii. This very morn I've felt the sweet surprise This world I deem but a beautiful dream, This worlde is but through-fare fulle of Those that are perfect men do not easily Thou for my sake at Allah's shrine, vii. 351, Though lost to sight, to memory dear, ii. Three little words we often see, iv. 242, 286 Thus spoke to my Lady the knight full of Quotations:- Time with a gift of tears ix. 470; 'Tis a wrong way to mercy to come with a Titulo dignatus equestri, i. 135; xii 66 To a mansion in the city, vii. 72 the ancients stole To Banbury came I, O profane one, iii. To fawne, to crowche, to waite, to ride, to To go the Way of all Flesh, xi. 530; xii. 34 To stir the holy tide of feeling up, xi. 433 viii. 52 very like yesterday Too quick a sense of constant infelicity, i. Too wise to err, too good to be unkind, iv. Touch God's Hand in the darkness, xii. Tout homme a deux pays, x. 152, 199 Trust Him who is thy God and have no Truth, like a torch, the more 'tis shook it Truth versus untruth, iv. 304 Tu, quod es e populo, quilibet esse potes, Two swallows flying high, vii. 236 Un Dieu défini, c'est un Dieu fini, iv. 162 Ut parentum sic principis ac patriæ Vecors segnities insignia nescit Amoris, vi. Violet of a legend, i. 327 Vivitur ingenio: cætera mortis erunt, iv. Wake! Wake to the hunting! i. 288, 340 We are all weary travellers, vii. 170 We have no glory great enough for you, We rule the world, we letters 5, iii. 249 117 Wer nicht liebt Wein, Weib, und Gesang, Were every man a scribe by trade, iv. 50, What is a Communist? vii. 278 What news bring you from the Holy What part of dread eternity, 'v. 322 The name of England may be found, i. 288 When Milton lost his eyes Poetry lost hers, When other ladies to the Groves go down, When prodigals return great things are When sparrows build and the leaves break When spring's voice is heard but the When the golden sun is sinking, iii. 148 When wild in woods the naked savage ran, Where shall England find her own? i. 467 While Death amid the tufted glade, vii. 410 While maudlin Whigs deplor'd their Cato's Whilst on his switch-tail'd bay, with but Who is the happy Warrior? xii. 30, 113 428 paper, x. 30 Rafale, Raffaele," military term, x. 409; (sail), derivation of word, xi. 109, Raid on a house by Staffordshire men, 1324, Raikes family and the Gloucester Journal,' x. Railings, English, in America, ix. 130, 197 "Whom the gods love die young," was said Why do men go up on the heights, xii. 394 With one good pen I wrote this book, xii. Within the garden of my lonely heart, vii. Wondrous are these Hearts of Men, i. 369 Work, The sole wisdom for man or boy, Would she could make of me a saint, or 499 Railway travelling, early, viii. 13, 32, 79 Rain and fishing, x. 72; and mowing, con- 521 Raleigh (Bridget), wife of Sir John Cope of Ramsay Alexander), his poem on the River Ramsgate, Queen Victoria's visit to West Cliff Ramsgate, Towneley House, its history, vi. 271 90 Randolph Gallery, Oxford, its history, vi. 228, Ranelagh in Paris, viii. 170, 214 istoriche Rank in Army and Navy, official scale of com- Rann (Rev. J.), b. 1732, d. 1811, his parentage, Ranton Abbey, engraving of a shooting party Rapehouse," 1663, history of the institution, Rapp: ? Jewish name, xi. 512; xii. 35 Rare - Rawson and ffairebanck families, viii. 307 Raynford (Sir Lawrence) and Edward IV's- Reaction," use of the word, ix. 474 118 Reade (Sir Reginald), Borderer. inquired after,. Reader (William) and the authorship of The Reading (John and Elizabeth), c. 1680, their Reading, the art of, vii. 170 Reading Mercury,' Vol. I, No. 1, 1723, ii. 366 373 Recitation: "And I am alone with my ale- Reckling," Lincolnshire term for smallest pig Recorders of Winchester, list of, ii. 210 underdone, use of the word in Recreation in Queen Anne's time, country, xi. Rasapina, vii. 92 209 Ratcatcher's Daughter,' history of the song, Red Dragon of Wales at 10, Downing Street, Ratcliff, Trinity House at, vi. 8 Ratcliff Cross, the restoration of, ii. 87; and ii. 310 Rathbone (Hannah M.), her Diary of Lady Rathbone (John), artist, b. c. 1750, d. 1807, ii. Rathbone (Rev. Richard) of Llanllyfni, 1765, ii. 289, 457, 536 Reeve," derivation of word, x. 311 Rent paid partly in kind, vi. 128, 211 dis- Regal Rambler,' 1793, the author, ii. 530; iii. Rethel (Alfred), his drawing Der Tod als 57 Regattas, early, viii. 310, 355 Regency Park, 1818, its locality, iv. 299 Regent's Park panoramic views, 1831, xi. 350 Regimental mottoes, xi. 61, 116, 235, 356 Guards, v. 270 "Remainder," use of the word in the book- " Reminiscences of a Scottish Gentleman,' by Renan and Oxford, xi. 143 (corrigendum 200) Rennie (J.), his book on the flying power of Renoleau, French céramiste, vii. 448 Freund,' vii. 234 Reuben Manasseh,' play by Alastor," ix.. 191 Réunion Club, x. 323 Revans (John, Stebbing and Samuel), West- "Revenge for Honour,' Glapthorne's play attri-- Revenue," pronunciation of the word, vii. 170, 108 iii. 360, 425 Reynolds (John), of Castlefinn, vii. 105 Reynolds (Sir Joshua), his portrait of Miss Reynolds (Richard), Bishop of Bangor, his Reynolds (Robert) of Harleston, Norfolk, d.. Reynolds (William) of Drummore, his will, vii.. Reynolds family of Castlefinn, vii. 104 Reynolds family of Loughacur, Co. Leitrim, Rheumatism cured by grease from church bells, Rhodes, old chimneypiece carried away by Sir Rhoscomyl (Owen), pseudonym of Owen |