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The Every-day Book and Table Book. v. 3 (of 3) / Everlasting Calerdar of Popular Amusements, Sports, Pastimes, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs and Events, Incident to Each of the Three Hundred and Sixty-five Days, in past and Present Times; Forming a Complete History of the Year, Month, and Seasons, and a Perpetual Key to the Almanac cover

The Every-day Book and Table Book. v. 3 (of 3) / Everlasting Calerdar of Popular Amusements, Sports, Pastimes, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs and Events, Incident to Each of the Three Hundred and Sixty-five Days, in past and Present Times; Forming a Complete History of the Year, Month, and Seasons, and a Perpetual Key to the Almanac

Chapter 1310: Dower.
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About This Book

The volume organizes a day-by-day miscellany that records popular amusements, sports, pastimes, ceremonies, manners, and customs for each day of the year, combining historical notes, antiquarian curiosities, chronology, topography, biography, natural history, art, science, rules for weather and health, and poetic and illustrative material. It assembles anecdotes, explanations of seasonal rituals and observances, translations and literary extracts, and practical advice in a miscellany format, accompanied by engravings and an index, intended as a perpetual almanac and a readerly resource for both entertainment and reference.

——— “’tis nature’s second Sun,
Causing a spring of Virtues where he shines;
And as without the Sun, the world’s Great Eye,
All colours, beauties, both of art and nature,
Are given in vain to man; so without Love
All beauties bred in women are in vain,
All virtues born in men lie buried;
For Love informs them as the Sun doth colours,” &c.

Chapman might be acquainted with Italian poets, but at all events the coincidence between the above and the following canzon, by Andrew Navagero, is remarkable. Navagero was the friend of Boscan, the Spanish poet: they became acquainted at Grenada, while Navagero was there ambassador from Venice. Boscan died before 1544; and, as he himself confesses, he learnt the sonnet and other Italian forms of poetry from Navagero.

Love the Mind’s Sun.

Sweet ladies, to whose lovely faces
Nature gives charms, indeed,
If those ye would exceed
And are desirous, too, of inward graces;
Ye first must ope your hearts’ enclosure,
And give Love entrance there.
Or ye must all despair
Of what ye wish, and bear it with composure.
For as the night than day is duller,
And what is hid by night
Glitters with morning light
In all the rich variety of colour;
So they, whose dark insensate bosoms
Love lights not, ne’er can know
The virtues thence that grow,
Wanting his beams to open virtue’s blossoms.

Our version is made from the original in Dolce’s Collection of Rime Diverse, i. 98. It ought to be mentioned, that Boscan’s admission of his obligations to Navagero is to be found in the Introduction to the second book of his works.

December, 1827. J. P. C.


NORWICH MOCK ELECTIONS.

To the Editor.

Sir,—At Costessy, a small village, three miles on the west side of Norwich, there is an annual mock guild on Whit Tuesday. It takes its name from the annual mayor’s feast at Norwich, being called the City Guild. The corporation at Costessy is composed of the poor inhabitants under the patronage of the marquis of Stafford, who has a beautiful seat in this village. On this day a mock mayor is annually elected; he has a proper and appropriate costume, and is attended by a sword-bearer, with a sword of state of wood painted and gilt, two mace-bearers with gilt maces, with a long array of officers, down to the snapdragon of Norwich, of which they have a passable imitation. Their first procession is to the hall, where they are recognised by the noble family who generally support the expenses of the day, and the mock mayor and corporation are liberally regaled from the strong-beer cellar. They then march, preceded by a band of music, to the steward’s house, where the mock solemnities take place, and speeches are made, which, if not remarkable for their eloquence, afford great delight by their absurd attempts at being thought so. The new mayor being invested with the insignia of his office, a bright brass jack-chain about his neck, the procession is again renewed to a large barn at some distance, where the place being decorated with boughs, flowers, and other rural devices, a substantial dinner of roast-beef, plum-pudding, and other good things, with plenty of that strong liquor called at Norwich nogg—the word I have been told is a provincial contraction for “knock me down.”

The village is usually thronged with company from Norwich, and all the rural festivities attendant on country feasts take place. The noble family before mentioned promote the hilarity by their presence and munificence. The elder members of the body corporate continue at the festal board, in imitation of their prototypes in larger corporations, to a late hour; and some of them have been noticed for doing as much credit to the good cheer provided on the occasion, as any alderman at a turtle feast. There is no record of the origin of this institution, as none of the members of the corporation have the gift of reading or writing, but there are traces of it beyond the memory of any person now living, and it has been observed to have increased in splendour of late years.

The fishermen’s guild at Norwich has for some years been kept on the real guild-day. The procession consists of a great number, all fishermen or fishmongers, two of whom are very remarkable. The first is the mayor: the last I saw was a well-looking young man, with his face painted and his hair powdered, profusely adorned with a brass chain, a fishing-rod in his hand, and a very large gold-laced hat; he was supported on the shoulders of several of his brethren in a fishing-boat, in which he stood up and delivered his speech to the surrounding multitude, in a manner that did not disgrace him. The other personage was the king of the ocean. What their conceptions of Neptune were, it is as difficult to conceive as his appearance might be to describe. He was represented by a tall man, habited in a seaman-like manner, his outward robe composed of fishing-nets, a long flowing beard ill accorded with a full-dress court wig, which had formerly been the property of some eminent barrister, but had now changed its element, and from dealing out law on the land, its mystic powers were transferred to the water. In his right hand he carried his trident, the spears of which were formed of three pickled herrings. His Tritons sounded his praise on all kinds of discordant wind instruments, and Æolus blew startling blasts on a cracked French horn. The olfactory nerves of the auditors who were hardy enough to come in close contact with the procession, were assailed by “a very ancient and fish-like smell.” The merriment was rude and very hearty.

P. B.


Old London Customs.

For the Table Book.

Paul’s Walkers—Hired Witnesses.

In the reigns of James I. and Charles I. a singular custom prevailed of the idle and dissolute part of the community assembling in the naves or other unemployed parts of large churches. The nave of St. Paul’s cathedral bore the name of Paul’s Walk; and so little was the sanctity of the place regarded, that if the description by an old author[517] is not exaggerated, the Royal Exchange at four o’clock does not present a greater scene of confusion. I carry the comparison no farther; the characters assembled in the church appear to have been very different to those composing the respectable assembly alluded to. The author referred to thus describes the place: “The noyse in it is like that of bees. It is the generall mint of all famous lies, which are here like the legends popery first coyn’d and stampt in the church. All inventions are empty’d here and not a few pockets.” “The visitants are all men without exceptions; but the principal inhabitants and possessors are stale knights, and captaines out of service; men of long rapiers and breeches.”

From the following passage in Hudibras[518] I should judge that the circular church in the Temple was the resort of characters of an equally bad description:

“Retain all sorts of witnesses,
That ply i’ th’ Temples, under trees,
Or walk the round, with knights o’ th’ posts,
About the cross-legg’d knights, their hosts;
Or wait for customers between
The pillar-rows in Lincoln’s Inn.”

The cross-legged knights, it is almost needless to add, are the effigies of the mailed warriors, which still remain in fine preservation. The “pillar-rows in Lincoln’s Inn,” I apprehend, refer to the crypt, or open vault, beneath Inigo Jones’s chapel in Lincoln’s Inn, originally designed for an ambulatory.[519] It is singular to reflect on the entire change in the public manners within two centuries. If coeval authorities did not exist to prove the fact, who would believe in these days, that, in a civilized country, men were to be found within the very seats of law ready to perjure themselves for hire? or that juries and judges did not treat the practice and the encouraging of it with a prompt and just severity?

St. Thomas’s Day Elections.

Previous to a court of common council, the members were formerly in the habit of assembling in the great hall of the Guildhall. When the hour of business arrived, one of the officers of the lord mayor’s household summoned them to their own chamber by the noise produced by moving an iron ring swiftly up and down a twisted or crankled bar of the same metal, which was affixed behind the door of the principal entrance to the passage leading to that part of the Guildhall styled, in civic language, the inner chambers. The custom was disused about forty years ago. The iron, I understand, remained until the demolition of the old doorway in the last general repair of the hall, when the giants descended from their stations without hearing the clock strike, and the new doorway was formed in a more convenient place. With the old-fashioned gallery, the invariable appendage to an ancient hall, which, until that period, occupied its proper place over the entrance, was destroyed that terror of idle apprentices, the prison of Little Ease. This gallery must be still remembered, as well as its shrill clock in a curious carved case. Its absence is not compensated by the perilous-looking balcony substituted for it on the opposite side, an object too trifling and frivolous for so fine a room as the civic common hall.

E. I. C.


[517] Microcosmographis 1628, cited in Pennant’s London, 5th ed. 8vo. 528.

[518] Part III., Canto III., p. 213. ed. 1684.

[519] Vide a paper by E. J. C. in Gent.’s Mag. vol. xc. p. 1, 589.


A DEFENCE OF SLANG.

For the Table Book.

“To think like wise men, and to talk like common people,” is a maxim that has long stood its ground. What is the language of “common people?” slangergo, every body ought to talk it. What is slang? Many will answer that it consists of words used only by the lowest and most ignorant classes of society, and that to employ them would be most ungenteel. First, then, we must inquire a little what it is to be genteel, and this involves the question, what is a gentleman? Etymologically, every body knows what is the meaning of the term; and Dekker, the old English play-poet, uses it in this sense, when in one of his best dramas he justly calls our Saviour

“The first true gentleman that ever breathed.”

Dekker’s greatest contemporary, in reference to certain qualities he attributes to “man’s deadliest enemy,” tells us, though we are not bound to take his word for it, unless we like it,

“The Prince of Darkness is a gentleman;”

in which he follows the opinion long before expressed by the Italian poet Pulci, in his Morgante Maggiore, (canto xxv. st. 161.)

Che gentilezza è bene anche in inferno.

Pulci seems so pleased with this discovery, (if it be one,) that he repeats it in nearly the same words (in the following canto, st. 83.)

Non creder ne lo inferno anche fra noi
Gentilezza non sia.

The old bone-shoveller in Hamlet maintains that your only real and thorough gentlemen are your “gardeners, ditchers, and grave-makers;” so that, after all, the authorities on this point are various and contradictory. If it be objected that slang (otherwise sometimes called flash) is employed very much by boxers and prize-fighters, teachers and practisers of “the noble science of self-defence,” one answer may be supplied by a quotation from Aristotle, which shows that he himself was well skilled in the art, and he gives instructions how important it is to hit straight instead of round, following up the blow by the weight of the body. His words upon this subject are quoted (with a very different purpose certainly) in the last number of the Edinburgh Review, (p. 279.) So that we need only refer to them. Another “old Grecian” might be instanced in favour of the use of slang, and even of incorrect grammar; for every scholar knows (and we know it who are no scholars) that Aristophanes in the first scene of his comedy, named in English The Clouds, makes his hero talk bad Greek, and employ language peculiar to the stable: the scholiasts assert that Phidippides ought to have said, even in his sleep, ω Φιλε αδιχεις instead of Φιλων αδιχεις, which he uses. However, we are perhaps growing too learned, although it will be found in the end, (if not already in the beginning,) that this is a learned article, and ought perhaps to have been sent for publication in the Classical Journal.

What we seek to establish is this:—that the language of the ignorant is the language of the learned; or in less apparently paradoxical terms, that what is considered slang and unfit for “ears polite,” is in fact a language derived from the purest and most recondite sources. What is the chief recommendation of lady Morgan’s new novel?—for what do ladies of fashion and education chiefly admire it? Because the authoress takes such pains to show that she is acquainted with French, Italian, and even Latin, and introduces so many apt and inapt quotations. What is the principal advantage of modern conversation? That our “home-keeping youths” have no longer “homely wits,” and that they interlard their talk with scraps and words from continental tongues. Now if we can show that slang is compounded, in a great degree, of words derived from German, French, Italian, and Latin, shall we not establish that what is at present the language of the ignorant is in fact the language of the learned, and ought to be the language employed by all gentlemen pretending to education, and of all ladies pretending to blue-stocking attainments? We proceed to do so by a selection of a few of the principal words which are considered slang or flash, of which we shall show the etymology.

Blowin—“an unfortunate girl,” in the language of the police-offices. This is a very old word in English, and it is derived from blühen, German, to bloom or blossom. Some may think that it comes from the German adjective blau. The Germans speak of a blue-eye, as we talk of a black-eye, and every body is aware that blowins are frequently thus ornamented.

To fib—a term in boxing. It means, to clasp an antagonist round the neck with one arm, and to punish him with the other hand. It is from the Italian fibbia, a clasp or buckle. The Italian verb affibiare is used by Casti precisely in this sense:—Gli affibia un gran ceffon. (Nov. xliii. st. 65.)

Fogle—a handkerchief—properly and strictly a handkerchief with a bird’s eye pattern upon it. From the German vogel, a bird.

Gam—the leg. Liston has introduced this word upon the stage, when in Lubin Log he tells old Brown that he is “stiffish about the gams.” We have it either from the French jambe, or the Italian gamba.

Leary—cunning or wary. Correctly it ought to be written lehry. The derivation of it is the German lehre, learning or warning. The authorities for this word are not older than the time of James I.

Max—gin. Evidently from the Latin maximus, in reference to the strength and goodness of the liquor.

To nim—to take, snatch, or seize. It is used by Chaucer—“well of English undefiled.” It is derived from the Saxon niman, whence also the German nehmen, to take. We have it in the every-day adjective, nimble. The name of the corporal in Shakspeare’s Henry V. ought to be spelled Nim, and not Nym, (as the commentators ignorantly give it,) from his furtive propensity.

Pal—a companion. It is perhaps going too far to fetch this word from the Persian palaker, a comrade. It rather originates in the famous story told by Boccacio, Chaucer, Dryden, &c. &c. of the friendship of Palamon and Arcyte; pal being only a familiar abbreviation of Palamon, to denote an intimate friend.

To prig—to rob or steal. It is doubtful whether this word be originally Spanish or Italian. Preguntar in Spanish is to demand, and robbing on the highway is demanding money or life. Priega in Italian is a petition—a mode of committing theft without personal violence. In English the word to prig is now applied chiefly to picking pockets, owing to the degeneracy of modern rogues: a prig is a pick-pocket.

Sappy—foolish, weak. Clearly from the Latin sapiolucus à non lucendo.

Seedy—shabby—worn out: a term used to indicate the decayed condition of one who has seen better days: it refers principally to the state of his apparel: thus a coat which has once been handsome, when it is old is called seedy, and the wearer is said to look seedy. It is only a corruption of the French ci-devant—formerly; with an ellipsis of the last syllable. It has no reference to running to seed, as is commonly supposed.

Spoony—silly or stupid—is used both as a substantive and as an adjective. Some have conjectured that it owes its origin to the wooden spoon at Cambridge, the lowest honour conferred by that university, the individual gaining it being entitled to no other, rather from his dulness than his ignorance. Its etymology is in fact to be found in the Italian word saponé, soap; and it is a well-known phrase that “a stupid fellow wants his brains washing with soap-suds.”

Spree—fun, joke—is from the French esprit, as every body must be aware in an instant.

Togs—dress—from the Latin toga, the robe worn by Roman citizens. Toggery means properly a great coat, but it is also used generally for the apparel.

We might go through the whole vocabulary in the same way, and prove that some terms are even derived from the Hebrew, through the medium of the Jews; but the preceding “elegant extracts” will be sufficient. It is to be regretted that the Rev. J. H. Todd has been so hasty in publishing his second edition of Johnson’s Dictionary, or he might, and no doubt would, after what we have said, include many words not now to be found there, and which we contend are the chief ornaments of our vernacular. Perhaps it would be worth his while to add a supplement, and we shall be happy to render him any assistance.

December, 1827. Philologus.


DIVINATION BY FLOWERS.

To the Editor.

Sir,—There is a love custom still observed in the village of Sutton Bangor, Wilts—Two flowers that have not blossomed are paired, and put by themselves—as many pairs as there are sweethearts in the neighbourhood, and tall and short as the respective sweethearts are. The initials of their names are attached to the stamens, and they are ranged in order in a hayloft or stable, in perfect secrecy, except to those who manage and watch their ominous growth. If, after ten days, any flower twines the other, it is settled as a match; if any flower turns a contrary way, it indicates a want of affection; if any flower blossoms, it denotes early offspring; if any flower dies suddenly, it is a token of the party’s death; if any flower wears a downcast appearance, sickness is indicated. True it is that flowers, from their very nature, assume all these positions; and in the situation described, their influence upon villagers is considerable. I was once a party interested, now

I am
A Flowerbud.


WALTHAM, ESSEX.

To the Editor.

Sir,—The following epitaph is upon a plain gravestone in the church-yard of Waltham Abbey. Having some point, it may perhaps be acceptable for the Table Book. I was told that the memory of the worthy curate is still held in great esteem by the inhabitants of that place.

Rev. Isaac Colnett,
Fifteen years curate of this Parish,
Died March 1, 1801—Aged 43 years.

Shall pride a heap of sculptured marble raise,
Some worthless, unmourn’d, titled fool to praise,
And shall we not by one poor gravestone show
Where pious, worthy Colnett sleeps below?

Surely common decency, if they are deficient in antiquarian feeling, should induce the inhabitants of Waltham Cross to take some measures, if not to restore, at least to preserve from further decay and dilapidation the remains of that beautiful monument of conjugal affection, the cross erected by Edward I. It is now in a sad disgraceful state.

I am, &c.
Z.


FULBOURN, CAMBRIDGE.

All Saints’ and St. Vigor’s Bells.

To the Editor.

On a visit to a friend at Fulbourn we strolled to the site whereon All Saints’ church formerly stood, and his portfolio furnished me with the subjoined memoranda, which by your fostering care may be preserved.

I am, sir, &c.

Cambridge, May, 1826. T. N.

Trinity Sunday, 1766.

This morning at five o’clock the steeple of All Saints’ church fell down. An act of parliament passed the 22d May, 1775, to unite the service in St. Vigor’s church, and to enable the vicar and churchwardens to sell the materials and the bells, towards repairing the church of St. Vigor’s—the amount was 150l. 0s. 6d. The two broken bells were sold towards the expenses; the other three, with the two of St. Vigor’s, and the saints’ bell, were new cast by E. Arnold at St. Neot’s Hunt’s, and six new bells were put up on the 9th of May, 1776. The subscription amounted to 141l.; the bells cost 262l. 2s. 3d.; the frames 45l., the six new ropes 1l. 15s.; making together the sum of 308l. 17s. 3d.

The poor inhabitants were so attached to the old bells, that they frequently watched them in the evening, lest they should be carried away and sold; for the broken bells lay among the ruins of All Saints’ church. At last their fears subsiding, they neglected their watching, and the churchwardens set a waggon in Monk’s barn, (hard by,) and carried away two of them in the night, delivering them to the Cambridge waggon for St. Neot’s, and returning before morning, which occasioned the following

Ballad.

There are some farmers in Fulbourn town,
They have lately sold what was not their own;
They have sold the bells, likewise the church,
And cheat the poor of twice as much.
And O! you Fulbourn farmers O!
Some estate there was left, all for the poor,
They have robb’d them of half, and something more,
Such dirty tricks will go hard on their sides.
For the d—l will have them, and singe their hides.
And O! you Fulbourn farmers O!
Before the bells they could be sold,
They were forc’d to swear, as we’ve been told,
They forswore themselves—then they cried.
For this, my boys, we shall be tried.
And O! you Fulbourn farmers O!
There is old Twig, and young Twig—the whining dissenter,
Says one to the other, this night we will venture;
And says little Gibble-Gabble, I long for to go.
But first I will call my neighbour Swing-toe:
And O! you Fulbourn farmers O!
In the dead of the night this thievish crew
Broke into the church, as other thieves do,
For to steal the bells and sell them all,
May the d—l take such churchwardens all;
And O! you Fulbourn farmers O!

This ballad is said to have been the production of one William Rolfe, a labourer. It was probably written soon after the act passed. The new peal was brought home on the 9th of May, 1776, so that it was not a year from the passing of the act to the casting of the bells.

After the bill had been perused by counsel, Mr. Edward Hancock, the rector’s churchwarden, conducted it through both houses of parliament without the expense of a solicitor; sir John Cotton, one of the members for the county, forwarding it in the different stages through the House of Commons. So earnest were the populace about the bells, (when they were satisfied they were to have a new peal of six,) that after they were loaded they drew them a furlong or more before the horses were put to the waggon. The tenor was cast in G sharp, or old A. Mr. Edmund Andrews Salisbury rode on the great bell, when it was drawn up within the steeple, and his was the first death this bell was rung for; he was buried 8th July, 1776. The motto on this bell is—

“I to the church the living call—
And to the grave I summon all.”

Mr. Charles Dawson was the author of the complete peal of Plain Bob, called “The Fulbourn Surprise” with 154 bobs, and two singles, and 720 changes. The peal was opened December 7, 1789.


ST. THOMAS’S DAY.
Mr. Day’s Short Day.

Mr. Thomas Day, of D——t, Wilts, used, when living, to give his workmen on St. Thomas’s Day a holiday, a short pint of his ale, an ounce of short-cut tobacco, and a short pipe, in remembrance of his name. “For,” said he,—in a couplet decidedly his own,—

“Look round the village where ye may;
Day is the shortest day, to-day.”

Puceron.


A PAGE FROM MY NOTE BOOK.

For the Table Book.

Election Bribery.

The first instance that occurs of this practice was so early as 13 Eliz., when one Thomas Longe (being a simple man of small capacity to serve in parliament) acknowledged that he had given the returning officer and others of the borough for which he was chosen FOUR POUNDS, to be returned member, and was for that premium elected. But for this offence the borough was amerced, the member was removed, and the officer was fined and imprisoned.—4 Inst. 23. Hale of Parl. 112. Com. Journ. 10 and 11 May, 1571.

Wonder-working Precedents.

“Unless,” said vice chancellor Leach, (11th March, 1826, in Mendizabal v. Machado,) “Unless I am bound hand and foot by precedents, I will not follow such a practice.”

Mem.

Blackstone, speaking of apprenticeships, says, “They are useful to the commonwealth, by employing of youth, and learning them to be early industrious.”

The same author says, “These payments (alluding to first fruits) were only due if the heir was of full age, but if he was under the age of twenty-one being a male, or fourteen being a female, the lord was entitled to the wardship of the heir, and was called the guardian in chivalry.”—Comm. book ii. c. 5. p. 67.

Dower.

The seisin of the husband, for a transitory instant only, when the same act which gives him the estate conveys it also out of him again, (as where, by a fine, land is granted to a man, and he immediately renders it back by the same fine,) such a seisin will not entitle the wife to dower: for the land was merely in transitu, and never rested in the husband, the grant and render being one continued act. But if the land abides in him for the interval of but a single moment, it seems that the wife shall be endowed thereof.—Black. Comm. book ii. c. 8. p. 132.

The author adds in a note: “This doctrine was extended very far by a jury in Wales, where the father and son were both hanged in one cart, but the son was supposed to have survived the father, by appearing to struggle longest; whereby he became seised of an estate in fee by survivorship, in consequence of which seisin his widow had a verdict for her dower.”—Cro. Eliz. 503.[520]

An unintentional Imitation extempore
of the 196th and 7th stanzas of the
2d canto of Don Juan
.

A mother bending o’er her child in prayer.
An arm outstretch’d to save a conquer’d foe.
The daughter’s bosom to the father’s lips laid bare.
The Horatii when they woo’d the blow
That say’d a nation’s blood, a young girl fair
Tending a dying husband’s bed of woe,
Are beautiful; but, oh, nor dead nor living.
Is aught so beautiful as woman wrong’d forgiving.
For there she is, the being who hath leant
In lone confiding love and weakness all
On us—whose unreproaching heart is rent
By our deed; yet on our cheek but fall
A tear, or be a sigh but spent.
She sinks upon the breast whence sprang the gall
That bitter’d her heart’s blood, and there caressing.
For pain and misery accords a blessing.——

Note for the Editor.—“An unintentional imitation” may sound something like a solecism, although a very little reflection will prove it to be far otherwise. I had been reading Don Juan till I had it by heart, and nightly spouted to the moon Julia’s letter and the invocation to the isles of Greece. I had a love fracas; a reconciliation, as one of the two alternative natural consequences, took place, and the foregoing were part of some propitiatory measures that effected it. At the time of writing them I had no more idea of imitating Byron, than has my Lord Chief Justice Best, in his charge to the jury in a newspaper cause, or crim. con. I wrote them rapidly, scarcely lifting my pen till they were finished, and certainly without bestowing a word or thought on any thing, except the image I pursued; but my mind had received a deep impression from my late reading, and my thoughts assumed the form they did from it, unknown to me. Some months afterwards, I was reciting the passage from Byron alluded to; I had heard something like it; I repeated it: I was more struck; I rack’d my brain and my lady’s letter-box, and made this discovery.

J. J. K.


[520] On a similar taking by the contingency of drowning, Fearne, the elegant writer on “Contingent Remainders,” has an admirable argument—a masterpiece of eloquent reasoning.—Edit.


Original Poetry.

For the Table Book.

CHRISTMAS.

Old Christmas comes again, and with him brings,
Although his visits are in times austere,
Not only recollections of good things.
But beareth in his hands substantial cheer:
Though short and dark the day, and long the night.
His joyous coming makes all faces bright.
And when you make your doors and windows fast.
And to your happy cheerful hearth retire,
A paradise is yours, safe from the blast,
In the fair circle gathering round the fire;
Whilst these, with social converse, books, and wine.
Make Winter’s ragged front almost divine!

W. M. W.


SONNET.

An Autumnal Midnight.

I walk in silence and the starry night;
And travellers with me are leaves alone.
Still onward fluttering, by light breezes blown.
The moon is yet in heaven, but soon her light,
Shed through the silvery clouds and on the dark
Must disappear. No sound I hear save trees
Swayed darkly, like the rush of far-off seas
That climb with murmurs loud the rocky steep.
There wakes no crowing cock, nor watch-dog’s bark.
I look around, as in a placid dream
Existing amidst beauty, and I seem
Relieved from human weakness, and from sleep,
A happy spirit ’neath the boundless heaven,
To whom not Day alone but Night is given!

W. M. W.


SEASONABLE STANZAS.

Winter, with hoary locks and frozen face,
Hath thrown his naked sceptre from his hand;
And he hath mended now his sluggish pace,
Beside the blazing yule-block fire to stand.
His ice-bound visage ’ginneth to expand;
And, for the naked pine-branch which he swayed.
He, smiling, hath a leaf-green sceptre planned;
The ivy and the holly he doth braid,
Beneath whose berries red is many a frolick played.
Now not in vain hath been the blooming spring,
The fruitful summer and the autumn sere;
For jolly Christmas to his board doth bring
The happy fulness of the passed year;
Man’s creeping blood and moody looks to cheer.
With mirthful revel rings each happy dome;
Unfelt within the snows and winds severe;
The tables groan with beef, the tankards foam,
And Winter blandly smiles to cheer the British home.

W. M. W.


Original Poetry.

For the Table Book.

The accompanying lines were written in allusion to that beautiful Gem of Dagley’s which Mr. Croly (page 21 of the vol.) supposes a Diana, and which Tassie’s Catalogue describes as such. I have, however, made bold to address her in her no less popular character of

EURYDICE.

“Ilia quidem dam te fugeret per flumina præceps
Immanem ante pedes hydrum moritura puella
Servantem ripas altâ non vidit in herbâ.”

Virg. Georg. IV.

Art can ne’er thine anguish lull,
Maiden passing beautiful!
Strive thou may’st,—’tis all in vain;
Art shall never heal thy pain:
Never may that serpent-sting
Cease thy snow-white foot to wring.
Mourner thou art doom’d to be
Unto all eternity.
Joy shall never soothe thy grief;
Thou must fall as doth the leaf
In thine own deep forest-bower,
Where thy lover, hour by hour,
Hath, with songs of woodland glee.
Like the never-wearied bee.
Fed him on the fond caress
Of thy youth’s fresh loveliness.
Youth!—’tis but a shadow now;—
Never more, lost maid, must thou
Trip it with coy foot across
Leafy brooks and beds of moss;
Never more, with stealthy tread,
Track the wild deer to his bed,
Stealing soft and silently,
Like the lone moon o’er the sea.
Vain thy lover’s whisper’d charm;
Love can never death disarm;
Hush’d the song he oft hath sung,—
Weak his voice, his lyre unstrung.
Think, then, if so hard to heal
Is the anguish thou dost feel.
Think—how bitter is the smart
When that wound is in the heart!

‘ϵ . . .

Hampstead.


Notice.

The Index, &c. to the present volume of the Table Book will conclude the work.

I respectfully bid my readers Farewell!

*


SPORTS AND PASTIMES
OF
THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND.

Perhaps I may be excused for noticing the forthcoming octavo edition of “The Sports and Pastimes of England,”—a work of very curious research and remarkable information, written and published in quarto by the late Mr. Joseph Strutt.

The Octavo Edition will be printed in a superior manner, on fine paper, with at least 140 Engravings. It will be published in Monthly Parts, price One Shilling each, and each part, on an average, will contain fourteen engravings. Above half of the drawings and engravings are already executed, and other means are taken to secure the punctual appearance of the work. The printer is already engaged on it, and the first part will certainly appear before the first of February.

A copious Index will be prepared, and the work be edited by

January 1, 1828. W. Hone.


Vol. II.—55.

INDEXES.

I. GENERAL INDEX.
II. CORRESPONDENTS’ INDEX.
III. INDEX TO THE POETRY.
IV. INDEX TO THE ENGRAVINGS.

I. THE GENERAL INDEX.

  • Abduction, curious respite from execution for, 414.
  • Abershaw, Jerry, 148, 149.
  • Aborigines, 447.
  • Abraham, heights of, in Derbyshire, 136.
  • Accidents to one man, 127.
  • Accompaniment to roasting, 201.
  • Actors—acting of old men by children, 526. See Plays.
  • Advertisements, singular, 222, 511, 616, 722.
  • Advice. See Counsels.
  • Age, reason for not reckoning, 352.
  • Air, philosophy of, 503.
  • Airay, (Tom) manager at Grassington, 247.
  • Ale, old English, 351; antiquity of beer, 746.
  • Alfred, tomb of, 734.
  • Alia Bhye, East Indian princess, 520.
  • Alleyn, actor, the Roscius of his day, 498, (note.)
  • Amadeus, duke of Savoy, 594.
  • “Ambitious Statesman, (The)” old play, 551.
  • Amilcas the fisherman, 639.
  • Amsterdam, notices of, 157, 460.
  • Anaximander, and other ancients, 819. See Ancients.
  • Ancients and moderns, discoveries of, 58, 83, 120, 182, 202, 214, 245, 342, 375, 406, 438, 472, 503, 632, 724, 742, 788, 819.
  • ——; mode of writing of the ancients, 196; superiority of their music, 202; casualties among, 574.
  • “Andronicus,” old play, 456.
  • Animals, theories on generation of, 792.
  • Animated nature, 216.
  • Anne, queen, 243.
  • Antipathies, instances of, 190.
  • “Antipodes, (The)” old play, 361.
  • Anty Brignal and the Begging Quaker, 761.
  • Aphorisms, 160, 181. See Counsels.
  • “Apostle Spoons,” 817.
  • Apothecary or Dramatist, 411.
  • Apprentices, to be found in sufficient wigs, 432.
  • Archimedes, and other ancients, 821. See Ancients.
  • Argyll, customs of, 10.
  • Aristarchus, and other ancients, 820. See Ancients.
  • Aristotle, former bondage to, 59.
  • Armstrong, Dr., notice of, 109.
  • Artists, letter of one to his son, 129.
  • Arts and Sciences, skill of the ancients in. See Ancients.
  • Arum, herb called, 369.
  • Ashburton Pop, 356.
  • “Asparagus Gardens, (The)” 363.
  • Assignats, (French) engraving, 209.
  • Astronomy, curious tract on, 252; ancients’ knowledge of, 794. See Ancients.
  • Atheism, scandals to, 773.
  • Attraction, 342.
  • Audley, Hugh, usurer, life of, 72.
  • Augustus, anecdote of, 231.
  • Aurora Borealis, opinions on, 633.
  • Authors, difficulties of, 123, 174; vanity of, 263, 811.
  • Avarice, sorts of, 77. See Misers.
  • Avenues of trees near Scheveling, 461.
  • Avon Mill, Wilts, 346.
  • Babylon, 822.
  • Bachelors; bachelor’s desk, 195; budge bachelors, 237; miserable home of bachelors, 269; pocket-book of one, 405.
  • Bakewell, in Derb.; monuments, &c. in church of, 198.
  • “Ballad Singer,” 666.
  • Bans, happy, 116.
  • Baptizing, customs touching, 23.
  • Bargest, the spectre hound, 655.
  • Barnes, Joshua, epitaph for, 33.
  • Barrington, George, notice of, 152.
  • “Bastard, (The)” old play, 171.
  • Bathing, (earth) 562.
  • Bear and Tenter, boys’ play, 364.
  • Beards on women, superstition about, 23.
  • Bears, habits of, 369.
  • Beaus, English and French, 774.
  • Beauty, ingenuous disclaimer of, 414; beauties at church, 774.
  • Bed, (celestial) 562.
  • Bede, (venerable) a hot spicer, 545.
  • Beer, antiquity of, 746.
  • Beethoven, musician, memoir of, 204.
  • Begging Quaker, &c. 761.
  • Bellows and bellows-makers, 603.
  • Bells. See Ringing.
  • “Belphegor,” old play, 552.
  • Beverley, a strong porter, 550.
  • Beverley, St. John of, 545.
  • Bhye, Alia, amiable character of, 520.
  • Bilbocquet, a royal amusement, 348.
  • Bill of fare, 44.
  • Birds; water-fowl at Niagara, 534; Dr. Fuller’s account of one, 287; Sandy’s method of hatching their eggs, 681. See Storks, &c.
  • Birmingham, clubs of, 89; manufactures, &c. of, 595.
  • Bishops; resignation of one, 103.
  • Blacking, notices about, 435.
  • Blackthorn, old custom of, 240.
  • Blake, W., hostler, engraving of, 47.
  • Blood, circulation of, notices about, 724.
  • Bloomfield, George, poet’s brother, engraving, 801.
  • ——, Robert, poet, notice of, 802.
  • “Blurt, Master Constable,” old play, 739.
  • Bodies, elements of, 214.
  • Bolton, John, of Durham, 409.
  • Bonaparte at Torbay, 360.
  • Bones, advice for breaking, 511.
  • Booker, Rev. L., notice of, 163.
  • Books; lending of, 285, 287; my pocket-book, 403; device taken from a book of prayers, 615, (note.)
  • Boots, importance of shape of, 512.
  • Boswelliana, 255.
  • Bowel complaints, receipt for, 256.
  • Braco, Lord, and a farthing, 242.
  • Brandon, Gregory, hangman, 699.
  • Brass-works, 601.
  • Bribery, in England, by foreigners, 16.
  • Bridal, public, 374.
  • “Bride, (The)” old play, 134.
  • Bridlington, custom at, 582.
  • Bristol, opulence and inns at, 243; prince George of Denmark at, 243; high cross at, 715.
  • Bromley, bishop’s well at, 65; engraving of the church-door, 97; extraordinary ringing at, 527.
  • Bruce, lord Edward, notices about, 225.
  • “Brutus of Alba,” old play, 711.
  • Brydges, sir E., epitaph on his daughter, 280.
  • Buckles, notices of, 597.
  • Budeus, (the learned) blunder of, 413.
  • Budge, [Fur] notices about, 236; budge-bachelors, 237; Budge-row, 237.
  • Building estimates should be doubled, 352.
  • Bunyan’s holy war dramatized, 24.
  • Burial in gardens, 460. See Funerals.
  • Burkitt, Dan., an old jigger, 278.
  • Bush tavern, Bristol, 44.
  • Butler, (Hudibras,) hint adopted by, 410.
  • Buttons, notices about, 596.
  • Buying and selling, 211.
  • Cabalistic learning, 20.
  • Cabbage-trees, vast height of, 471.
  • Calvin and Servetus, 730.
  • Cann, Abraham, wrestler, 499.
  • CAPITAL extempore, 480.
  • Capon, William, scene painter, notice of, 709.
  • Carlisle, customs at, 373.
  • Castle-baynard, tale of, 242.
  • Casualties of the ancients, 574.
  • Cataracts of Niagara, 531.
  • Caverns, tremendous one, 541.
  • Centenaries; medal for the centenary of the diet of Augsburgh, 321; centenary of the revolution, 515.
  • Cesar and Amilcas, 638.
  • “Chabot, Admiral of France,” old play, 6.
  • Chains, hanging in, 149.
  • Chairs, (arm) curious ones, 436, 622.
  • “Challenge to Beauty,” old play, 498, 622.
  • Charlemagne, misfortunes in family of, 397.
  • Charles I. and treaty of Uxbridge, 521.
  • —— II., anecdote of, 33; procession on his restoration, 505; his court, 832.
  • —— V., bribery of English parliament by, 16.
  • Charost, M. de, a royal favourite, 512.
  • Chartres, duke of, notice of, 209.
  • Chateaubriand, viscount de, anecdote of, 415.
  • Chatsworth, 135.
  • Chemistry of the ancients, 743, 746, 789.
  • Chequers at public-houses, 38.
  • Chester, custom at, 613.
  • Chiari and rival dramatists, 11.
  • Children, customs relating to, 21; children and mother, 441; children and split trees superstition concerning, 465; affection for children, 491.
  • Christening, customs at, 23.
  • Christian Malford, plague at, 553.
  • Christmas-pie, 506.
  • Chrysanthemum Indicum, 737.
  • Churches, remarks on beautifying, 25; custom of strewing with rushes, 277. See Fonts.
  • Church-yards, beautiful one at Grassmere, 278.
  • Cigar divan of Mr. Gliddon, 673.
  • Cinderella, origin of, 719.
  • Circle, squaring the, 797.
  • Circulation of the blood, 724.
  • Cities, ancient, 822.
  • Civilisation promoted by trade, 212.
  • Cleopatra’s pearl, 789.
  • Clergy, luxurious dress of, 236; weekly expenses of a clergyman, 283; devoted attachment of one to his flock, 483.
  • Clerk’s desk, 195.
  • Clocks, difference between, accounted for, 409.
  • Closing the eyes, 27.
  • Clubs at Birmingham, 89.
  • Coachman, considerate, 146.
  • Coats, how speedily made, 86.
  • “Cock and Pynot” public-house, 513.
  • Colossus of Rhodes, 823.
  • Colours, philosophy of, 406.
  • Comets, philosophy of, 472.
  • Commerce, tendency of, 214.
  • Compliment to a young laird, 256.
  • Confession of Augsburgh, medal about, 321.
  • Controversy, 160.
  • Cookery aided by music, 204.
  • Copernican system, 438.
  • Cordon, sanitary, 493, 495.
  • Corineus, a Trojan giant, 615, 617.
  • Cornwall, wrestling in, 499.
  • Corporations, fools kept by, 353.
  • Corpuscular philosophy, 245.
  • Corral,—a poor cottager, 784.
  • Cottagers, singular difficulties of one, 385, &c.
  • Counsels and cautions, 160, 181, 352, 478, 541, 817.
  • Country, (native) 809.
  • —— dances, 32.
  • Courtiers, humiliation of one, 174.
  • Courtship, patient, 818.
  • Coward, Nathan, glover and poet, 259.
  • Crabbing for husbands, 465.
  • Craven, notices of, 243, 721; stories of the Craven dales, 653, 775.
  • Cries, old London, 431.
  • Criticism, killing, 651.
  • Crystal summer-house, 253.
  • Cuckoo-pint, a plant, 369.
  • Cumberland, customs of, 373, 559.
  • Cup and ball, a royal amusement, 348.
  • Cyrus, his love of gardening, 459.
  • Dairy poetry, 238.
  • Danby, earl of, and the revolution, 513.
  • Dancing; country-dances, 32; profound study of minuets, 64; dancing round the harrow, 197.
  • Darwin, Dr., his “Botanic garden,” 459, (note.)
  • Davy, (old) the broom-maker, 452.
  • D’Arcy, Mr. J., and the revolution, 515.
  • Death and virtue, dialogue between, 19; superstitions touching death, 99.
  • “Defeat of Time, (The)” 335.
  • Democritus, notice of, 791.
  • Deposits, a well-kept one, 415.
  • Derbyshire, notices respecting, 12, 135, 481, 493, 516.
  • Descent, canons of, 63.
  • “Desolation of Eyam, (The)” 481.
  • Despotism, virtuous, 520.
  • “Devil’s Law Case, (The)” old play, 131.
  • Devil’s punch-bowl in Surrey, 145.
  • Devonshire wrestling, 416, 499.
  • —— ——, earl of, and the revolution, 513.
  • Dial, ancient, 19.
  • Diarrhœa, receipt for, 256.
  • Diligence (French) described, 183.
  • Dining on Coke, 63; royal dinner time, 751.
  • Diophantes and other ancients, 820. See Ancients.
  • Discoveries of the ancients and moderns, 83, 120, 182, 214, 245, 342, 375, 406, 438, 472, 503, 632, 724, 742, 788, 819.
  • Diseases, passing patients through trees for, 465.
  • Disputation to be avoided, 160.
  • Distillation, ancients’ knowledge of, 788.
  • Diversions, political origin of some, 364.
  • Doctor degraded, 640.
  • “Dodypol, Doctor,” old play, 69.
  • Domitian, (the emperor) inscription for, 754.
  • “Don Quixotte,” old play, 457.
  • Dorking, Leith hill, near, 117.
  • Dover pig, 731.
  • Dramatists; rival Italian dramatists, 11; dramatist or apothecary, 411.
  • Dreams, a black dream, 126.
  • Duddlestone, John, of Bristol, 243.
  • Duels of sir E. Sackville and lord E. Bruce, 225, &c.
  • Dunchurch cow and calf, 723.
  • Durfey, Tom, notice of, 650.
  • Durhamiana, 409.
  • Dutch royal gardens, 460; Dutch trees, fisheries, &c., 460, &c.; Dutch customs, 563; Dutch gallantry, 773.
  • Earning the best getting, 160.
  • Earth-bathing, 562.
  • Earthquakes, opinions on, 633.
  • East Indies, amiable native monarch in, 520.
  • Ecbatane, city of, 822.
  • Echo, (moral) 410.
  • Economy, curious instance of, 78. See Misers.
  • Edmonton, inhospitable styles of, 81.
  • “Edward the Third,” old play, 52.
  • Eels, (Bush) 224.
  • Eggs, peculiar mode of hatching, 681; artificial hatching by the ancients, 746.
  • Eldon, lord, anecdote of, 63.
  • Electricity, 637.
  • Elm-tree, celebrated one, 422.
  • Emigration, Highland, 322.
  • Emperors and kings, ill-fated ones, 395, 397.
  • “English Monsieur,” 330.
  • Epilepsy, disorder of great minds, 807.
  • Epitaphs, 16, 19, 33, 104, 147, 152, 182, 198, 249, 256, 259, 273, 274, 280, 281, 295, 298, 300, 366, 410, 510, 526, 558, 754.
  • Erasmus, notices of, 199, 340.
  • Ether, doctrine of, 503.
  • Esop in Russia, 457.
  • Eternity, 808.
  • Etiquette, Spanish, 254.
  • Evelyn, extracts from, 829, &c.
  • Executioner, 698.
  • Executions, former frequency of, 151.
  • Ex-Thespianism, 554.
  • Eyam in Derb., notices of, 481, &c., 629.
  • Eyes: closing the eyes, 27; guard against an evil eye, 583.
  • Eyre, chief justice, notice of, 151, 152.
  • Facetiæ, 771.
  • “Fairies, tale of the,” 335.
  • “Faithful Shepherd, (The)” old play, 525.
  • “Faithful Shepherdess, (The)” old play, 619.
  • Falls of Niagara, 531.
  • Families; ill-fated royal ones, 397; Wilkie’s picture of one, 509.
  • Fare, bill of, 44.
  • Farthings; one found by a lord, 242; the broad farthing, 507.
  • Fashion, a gentleman’s, 341.
  • “Fatal Jealousy,” old play, 579.
  • “Fatal Union, (The)” 713.
  • Father and son, 31.
  • Favourites, a singular one, 512.
  • “Fawn, (The)” old play, 424.
  • Ferguson, sir A., letter from sir Walter Scott to, 518.
  • Filching, cure of, 285.
  • Filey, in Yorkshire, 637.
  • Fill-up, (a) 735.
  • Fire, water mistaken for, 534.
  • Fires in London, 570; “burning the witch,” 582.
  • Fish, royal reason for not eating, 288.
  • Fishermen; Lucan’s description of one, 638.
  • Fishing-towns, Dutch and English, 463.
  • “Five days’ Peregrination,” &c., 291.
  • Fletcher, Dickey, 765.
  • “Floating Island, (The)” 552.
  • Flowers; Time’s source of pleasure from, 337; mode of preserving, 604; winter flowers, 737.
  • Fly-boat, (the Malden) 559.
  • Fonts; Grassmere font, 272.
  • Forces, doctrine of, 342.
  • Forests, ancient and decayed, in Scotland, 324, 325. See Trees.
  • Forrest, ——, author of “Five Days’ Peregrination,” 291.
  • Fractures, singular advice about, 511.
  • French diligence, description of, 683.
  • Fruit, markets for, at London and Paris, 130.
  • Funerals, customs touching, 105, 272, 373, 658; consolation from funeral processions, 479.
  • Furniture of old times, 584.
  • Furs; tippets and scarfs, 235.
  • Gage, viscount, his fête of the quintain, 175.
  • Gallantry, Dutch, 773.
  • Gaols. See Prisons.
  • Gardens; summer garden of Peter the Great, 457; love of gardens, 459; Dutch royal garden, 460.
  • Garlands, funeral, 105, 272.
  • Garrick plays, selections from, contributed by Mr. Charles Lamb, 6, 52, 67, 106, 131, 171, 200, 232, 265, 328, 361, 393, 456, 497, 524, 551, 579, 619, 645, 711, 739, 771, 806.
  • Genders, 284.
  • Genius, distresses of men of, 123; genius and good temper, 414.
  • “Gentleman Usher,” old play, 171.
  • “Gentleman of Venice,” old play, 106.
  • George, prince of Denmark, notice of, 243.
  • Giants in lord mayor’s show, 609.
  • Gibbeting, 151.
  • Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall,” 287.
  • Gilding without gold, 597.
  • Gilpin (Mrs.) riding to Edmonton, 79.
  • Gimmal ring, engraving, 1.
  • Gin act, effect of passing, 249.
  • Gipsies in Epping Forest, 28.
  • Glass, discovery of, 734; skill of the ancients in, 789, 796, 824.
  • Gleaning or leasing cake, 346.
  • Gliddon, Mr., cigar divan of, 673.
  • Glorious memory, (the) 480.
  • Gluttony, instances of, 350; glutton and echo, 410.
  • Gog and Magog of Guildhall, 609.
  • Gold, skill of the ancients in arts relating to, 744.
  • Goldoni and rival dramatists, 11.
  • Good temper and good nature, 414.
  • Goodrick, sir H., and the Revolution, 515.
  • Goose-fair at Nottingham, 180, (note.)
  • Gossip and Stare, the, 61; comment on literary gossip, 508.
  • Gostling’s, Mr., account of Hogarth’s tour, 303.
  • Gout, notices on, 652.
  • Government, simplicity and wisdom of, 417, &c.
  • Gozzi, Italian dramatist, 11.
  • Graham, Dr., lecturer, 561.
  • Grammar explained, 128.
  • Grapes in Covent Garden, &c. 139. See also 33, 628.
  • Grasshopper on Change, explanation of, 338, 339.
  • Grassington theatricals, 247, 606.
  • Grassmere, beauty of, 277.
  • Gravity, doctrine of, 342.
  • Greatness, tax on, 809.
  • Green, W., artist and author, 281.
  • Gregory, old name for the hangman, 701.
  • Gresham, sir Thomas, a deserted child, 338.
  • Gretna Green parsons, 125.
  • Guildford races, 705.
  • Guildhall, curious explanation of, 767.
  • Guinea sovereigns, 751.
  • Gunpowder, antiquity of, 791.
  • Guns; air-guns, 508; notices concerning guns, 598.
  • Hackerston’s cow, 250.
  • Hague, fine woods near, 460.
  • Hammond, the poet, notice of, 111.
  • Handkerchief, white cambric, 294.
  • Hanging in chains, 149; inducement to hanging, 256; hanging the shuttle, 221.
  • Hangman, and his wages, 698.
  • Harpham, St. John’s well at, 545.
  • Harris, James, 284.
  • Harrow, dancing round the, 197.
  • Harvest-catch, in Norfolk, 333.
  • Hats; substitute for the shovel-hat, 381.
  • Hay-band, origin of, 714.
  • Heart, perpetual motion of, 544; case containing Lord Bruce’s heart, 225; instance of heart-burial, 230: disposal of sir W. Temple’s heart, 460.
  • Heat, how counteracted at Siam, 253.
  • Heaving, in wrestling, explained, 501.
  • “Hectors, (The)” old play, 392.
  • Hell-bridge, in the Highlands, 87.
  • Henley, (Orator) advertisement of, 616.
  • Henry II. character of, 154.
  • —— III. of France, amusements of, 348.
  • —— VIII. and his peers, 571.
  • Hermits, 593.
  • Hervé, Peter, artist, letter respecting, 20.
  • Hervey, Rev. J., notices of, 366.
  • “Hey for Honesty,” old play, 394.
  • Highlands. See Scotland.
  • Highwaymen, nearly extinct, 149, 150.
  • Hill, sir John, physician, notice of, 652.
  • Hipparchus, and other ancients, 820. See Ancients.
  • Hippocrates, curious advice of, 511.
  • History of Rome, doubt on, 413; pleasing passage of history, 422.
  • “Hoffman’s Tragedy, or Revenge for a Father,” old play, 740.
  • Hogarth, curious notices of, 289, &c.
  • Holland, customs of, 563. See Dutch.
  • Holt, John, a great ringer, 529.
  • Holwood, seat of Mr. Pitt, engraving and notices of, 623, 642.
  • Home, praises of, 268.
  • Hood, T., sonnet to, 239; Plea of the Fairies, by, 340; “Whims and Oddities” of, 659.
  • Hoppins, David, a singular parodist, 341.
  • Horace, pious parody of, 339.
  • Horæ Cravenæ, 721.
  • Horns, emblems of kingly power, 420.
  • Horsedealing, latitude of deceit in, 213.
  • Horses, marks of age of, 357.
  • Horsham gaol, 93.
  • Horticulture recommended, 459.
  • Hostler, derivation of, 49.
  • Hotels. See Taverns.
  • Houses and accommodations of old times, 584; country-houses lead to poor-houses, 352.
  • Howitt, William and Mary, their Poems, 417, 481.
  • Humour, definition of, 290.
  • “Huntingdon Divertisement,” old play, 581.
  • Huntsman, Mr. Woodford’s, 192.
  • Husbandman, (The retired) engraving, 17.
  • Husbands, a happy one, 442; crabbing for husbands, 464; evidence of affection for one, 544. See Wives.
  • Hydrophobia, 667.
  • Hypochondria, 91.
  • Ideas (innate), 120.
  • Illusion, pleasures of, 757.
  • Imperial fate, 395.
  • Indians—and William Penn, 417, &c.; adventure of some, 534; Indians at Court in 1734, 693.
  • “Infant Genius,” 659.
  • Infants, offerings to, 21; picture of a deserted one, 338.
  • Innate ideas, 120.
  • Inns of the Romans, &c. 37, 39, 49; seeking lost sign of one, 410; good ones the result only of great travelling, 544; inn yards, 681.
  • Intemperance, corrected by echo, 410.
  • Invasion and volunteers, 55.
  • Ireland, customs in, 23; Irish tobacco-pipes, 769.
  • Islington, rights of parish of, 392, 787.
  • Italian dramatists, 11.
  • Jack the Viper, 763.
  • Jack Ketch a gentleman, 698.
  • Jemmal ring, 1.
  • Jennens, Charles, notice of, 651.
  • Jew’s harp, 31.
  • John, (St.) a custom on St. John’s eve, 99, St. John of Beverley’s Well at Harpham, 545.
  • Johannites, notice of, 721.
  • Johnson, Dr., “an odd kind of a chiel,” 255.
  • Jones, Rev. M., Berkshire miser, 380.
  • Jubilee, (Revolution) 515.
  • Judges—a singular decree of one, 64; curious description of one, 255; a candid judge, 351; juries the better judges, 351.
  • Juries, the better judges, 351; decisions of juries, 733.
  • Justices of peace, female, 571.
  • Juxton, bishop, notice of, 192.
  • Kalm, Swedish traveller, his description of Niagara, 532.
  • Keats, John, poet, epitaph on himself, 249; notices of, 371, 430.
  • Kelly, Miss, notices respecting, 55, 68.
  • Keston Cross, 33.
  • Ketch, Jack, 698.
  • Kicking, in wrestling, barbarous, 500, 502.
  • Kings and emperors, ill-fated ones, 395, 397; kings in Africa, 752.
  • “King’s Arms,” 32.
  • Kirkby, 437.
  • Labour and luck, 160.
  • Lacteals in a mole, 191.
  • Ladies. See Women.
  • Lairds, compliment to a young one, 255.
  • Landlady, agreeable, 285.
  • Language, genders in, 284.
  • Laurence Kirk snuff-boxes, 680.
  • Law of kindness, 496.
  • Law and poetry, 63; remark on law-books, 734.
  • Lawyers, two, 475.
  • Leaping, curious instance of, 279.
  • Leaves scorched by summer-showers, 253.
  • Lee Penny, The, engraving, 143.
  • Leeds, duke of, [earl of Danby], vindication of, 515.
  • Leith Hill, near Dorking, 117.
  • Lettsom, Dr., notice of, 285.
  • Liars, incredible, 639.
  • Life, description of, 810.
  • Light, philosophy of, 408, 794.
  • Limbs, advice in case of one broken, 511.
  • Liston, Mr., 650.
  • Literature, foolish labour in, 28, 765.
  • Living well, 32.
  • Loadstone, opinions on, 635.
  • London; fruit markets of London and Paris, 138; old London Cries, 431; a London watchman, 523; fires in London, 570; Londiniana, 587; giants in Guildhall, 609. See Islington, &c.
  • Longevity of a Highlander, 213.
  • Lord Mayor’s show, giants in, &c. 609.
  • Lords and ladies, vegetable, 369.
  • “Love Tricks,” old play, 172.
  • Love, David, walking stationer, 177.
  • Lovers, hostility of time to, 337.
  • “Love’s Dominion,” old play, 456.
  • “Love’s Metamorphosis,” old play, 265.
  • Loyola, Ignatius, and his boot, 512.
  • Luck and labour, 160.
  • Lyttleton, sir George, notice of, 590.
  • Macdonald, John, a Highlander, 213.
  • “Mad Dog,” 666.
  • Magpie, anecdote of, 608.
  • Maid of honour, curious patent to one, 413.
  • “Maid Marian,” letter respecting, 10.
  • Mallet, David, notice of, 110.
  • “Mamamouchi,” old play, 231.
  • Man, description of, 809.
  • “Man in the Moon,” tract called, 252.
  • Manners of old times, 584, 829.
  • Manufactures, celerity of processes of, 86; of Birmingham, 595.
  • Manuscripts, curious restoration of one, 415.
  • Mariner, (an ultra) 188.
  • Mark, St., customs on St. Mark’s eve, 99, 159, 251.
  • Markets (fruit) of London and Paris, 138.
  • Marlow, poet, merit of, 498 (note.)
  • Marot, Clement, French poet, notice of, 766.
  • Marriage, the Gimmal Ring, 1; a happy marriage, 116; Gretna Green parsons, 125; old customs at, 239, 348, 373; ungallant toll on brides, 343; marriage under the protectorate, 506.
  • “Married Beau, (The)” old play, 622.
  • Martin, St., and the Devil, 170.
  • Mary, Peter and, 264.
  • Matlock, 135.
  • Mayor’s feast, temp. Elizabeth, 617.
  • Mechanical power, 85; ancients’ knowledge of, 794, 822, 824.
  • Medals; commemoration medal of diet of Augsburgh, 321.
  • Medicine, skill of the ancients in, 743, 746.
  • Melancthon and Calvin, 736.
  • Melons, varieties and weights of, 141.
  • Memory with stupidity, instance of, 571.
  • Menage, advice of, touching poetry, 512.
  • Mendip mines and miners, 695.
  • Merrow, in Surrey, 705.
  • Meum et Tuum, 250.
  • Mice, field, for preventing injuries from, 467.
  • Michaelmas day, customs on, 464.
  • Microscopes, whether known to the ancients, 824.
  • Milk, in America, 480.
  • Milky Way, the, 375.
  • Mill, the haunted, 476.
  • Millhouse, Robert, his Poems, 161.
  • Mines, descent into, 137; Mendip mines and miners, 695.
  • Minuets, laborious study of, 64.
  • Misers, notices of, 72, 77, 78, 118, 153, 242, 380.
  • Misery,—a bond of affection, 806; trial through, 807.
  • Miss, designation of, 831.
  • Mitcheson, Tommy, of Durham, 287.
  • Moderns and ancients, discoveries of, 58, 83, 120, 182, 202, 214, 245, 342, 375, 406, 438, 472, 503, 632, 724, 743, 788, 819.
  • Mœris, (Lake) in Egypt, 823.
  • Moles, lacteals in, 191.
  • Mompesson, Rev. W., and his wife, 481, &c.
  • Monarchs, most ancient of, 335; ill-fated ones, 395, 397; a pure and exemplary one, 520.
  • Money, rareness of due care of, 78.
  • Monkey, gallant comparison with, 573.
  • Monmouth, duke of, 702.
  • Montmorenci, Ann, anecdotes of, 174, 208.
  • Moon, philosophy of, 473; tincture of moon, 653; moonlight view of Niagara, 543.
  • More, sir T., 704.
  • Mosaics of the ancients, 826.
  • Mother and her children, 441.
  • Mummies, 744.
  • Music, superiority of the ancient, 202, 826, musical anecdotes, 204; memoir of Beethoven, 206; the music which old Time delights in, 336.
  • My Pocket Book, 403.
  • Mysteries dramatized, 113.
  • Nails and nail-makers, 602.
  • Names, scriptural, &c. 767.
  • Nationality, 331.
  • Nature, animated, 216.
  • Navarino, description of, 513.
  • Newspapers; newspaper orthography, 222; classification of readers of newspapers, 570. See Advertisements.
  • Newtonian philosophy and the ancients. See Ancients.
  • Niagara, cataracts of, 531.
  • Nixon’s prophecies, notice of, 224.
  • Norfolk, custom in, 333.
  • Northumberland, custom in, 21.
  • Norwich Guild, 617.
  • Nottingham, custom at, 180 (note); Nottingham and the revolution, 513.
  • Oaks, fine ones in Holland, 460.
  • “Oddities, Whims and,” by T. Hood, 559.
  • Offerings to infants, 21.
  • Offices, estimates of value of, 76.
  • Oglethorpe, general, notice of, 693.
  • “Old England forever,” pamphlet called, 353.
  • Opinions, former authority of, 59.
  • Opium-eater, the, notices of, 277, 278.
  • “Oranges, The Three,” play called, 11.
  • Orleans, duchess of, ingenuous disclaimer by, 414.
  • Ostler, derivation of, 49.
  • Oyster cellars, entertainment of, 40.
  • Page’s Lock, near Hoddesdon, curious chair at, 436.
  • Painting on cloth and glass, by the ancients, 745, 789, 825.
  • Palindrome, explanation and instance of, 169.
  • Parents’ affection, 441, 491.
  • Paris and London, fruit markets of, 138.
  • Parishes, abuses in, 25.
  • Parliament, bribery of, by Charles V., 16.
  • Parodies, pious, of Horace, 339.
  • Parr, Dr., early model of, for style, 369.
  • Parsimony. See Misers.
  • Party of pleasure, interesting, 289.
  • Pastoral and tragi-comedy, definitions of, 621.
  • Pavy Labathiel, 526.
  • Pawning, valuable resource of, 78.
  • Peak’s hole, 14.
  • Peal (dumb) of Grandsire Triples, 527.
  • Pearce, Dr. Z., anecdote of, 103.
  • Pearl, Cleopatra’s, 789.
  • Pegge, Rev. S., revolution centenary sermon of, 516, 517, 697.
  • Pemberton, sir J., lord mayor, 19.
  • Penn, William, and the Indians, engraving, 417.
  • Penny, (The Lee) an antique, description of, 143.
  • Pentheney, Anthony, a miser, notice of, 118.
  • Pepys, extracts from, 830, &c.
  • Perfection, the steps of, 222.
  • Peter the Great, summer garden of, 457.
  • Peter-house college, anecdote touching, 264.
  • Philadelphia, origin of, 419.
  • Philippos, 705.
  • Philosophy; of ancients and moderns. See Ancients. Philosophy of a fairy, 339.
  • Physicians, a benevolent one, 285; two physicians, 475.
  • Pickpockets, 232.
  • Pickworth, Mr. C., letter to, 605.
  • Pie, Christmas, 506.
  • Pikeman, or turnpike-man, 684.
  • Pine apples, 138.
  • Pipes, Irish tobacco, 769.
  • Piscatoria, 638.
  • Pitt, Mr. W., notices of, and of his seat at Holwood, 627.
  • Plague at Eyam, 481, &c., 629.
  • Planets, material of one, 252.
  • Planting in Scotland, 326; planting recommended, 459, 470.
  • Plato, mode of studying, 174; Plato and other ancients, 820. See Ancients.
  • Plays at Linton and Grassington, 247; play-wrighting, 411; acting of extraordinary children in plays, 526; performance of plays at Christian Malford, 553; definition of pastoral and tragi-comedy, 621; expedients and difficulties of players, 554; selections contributed by Mr. C. Lamb from the Garrick plays, 6, 52, 67, 106, 131, 171, 200, 232, 265, 328, 361, 393, 456, 497, 524, 551, 579, 619, 711, 739, 771, 806.
  • “Plea of the Fairies,” 340.
  • Pleasures of Illusion, 757.
  • “Plotting Parlour, (The)” 514.
  • Plurality of worlds, doctrine of, 375.
  • Poaching, vindication of, 115.
  • Pockets, pickpockets, and pocket-handkerchiefs, 231, 232.
  • Poetry, thou and you in, 232; rule for criticism of, 512; diction of, 811.
  • Poets, distresses of, 123; an athletic poet, 279; reward of an ingenious one, 231; encouragement to poets, 691.
  • Politeness, 414.
  • Polkinghorne, a famous wrestler, 499.
  • Polypi, 793.
  • Pope, Alexander, notice of, 109.
  • Portraits, picture of taking, 452.
  • Portuguese mysteries, 114.
  • Preacher, (Puritan) 808.
  • Prescription of money, instead of physic, 286.
  • Presents, to infants, custom of, 21; at weddings, 373.
  • Pride, remarks on, 600; instances of, 751.
  • Princesses, mode of carrying, 174.
  • Prisons, ancient and modern, 92.
  • Processions at funerals, 479; at the restoration, 505; on centenary of the revolution, 518.
  • Public-houses, 37, 39, &c., 51.
  • Puddle-dock, duke of, 291.
  • Pulpits; pulpit desk, 195; pulpit in the rock, 495.
  • Punch bowl, Devil’s, 145.
  • Punctilio, Spanish, 254.
  • Purple of the ancients, 636 (note.)
  • Pyramids of Egypt, 823.
  • Pythagoras, power of his music, 203; Pythagoras and other ancients, 819. See Ancients.
  • Pytheas and other ancients, 819. See Ancients.
  • Quakers; The Three Quakers, 50; quakers under William Penn, 417, &c.; origin of the term quaker, 429.
  • Queenborough, curious account of, 297.
  • Qualities, sensible, doctrine of, 182.
  • Quid pro quo, 31.
  • Quin, notices of, 111, 589.
  • Quintain, the, 175, 239.
  • Quipoes explained, 112.
  • Rain, effect of, 254.
  • Rainbow at Niagara, 537, 542.
  • “Ram Alley,” old play, 497.
  • Ravensbourne, sources of the, engraving, 641.
  • “Rebellion, (The)” old play, 525.
  • Request, modest, 639.
  • “Return, The Soldier’s,” 576.
  • Rhodian Colossus, 823.
  • Rhodope and Cinderella, 720.
  • Ridicule, 174.
  • Ringing, memorial of, at Bromley, 527; anecdotes of ringers, 529.
  • Rings; the Gimmal ring, engraving and notice of, 1.
  • Rivers, opinions on, 697.
  • Roasting, musical, 204.
  • Robertson, J., a friend of Thomson, 379.
  • Romans, customs of, 37; fatality of Roman emperors, 395; doubts on Roman history, 413; Roman remains, 626, 629, 641.
  • Romuald, St., 593.
  • Rope-riding, at Venice, 251.
  • Royal families, ill-fated ones, 397.
  • “Royal King and Loyal Subject, (The)” old play, 497.
  • Ruptures, curious application for, 466.
  • Rushes, houses and churches strewed with, 277, &c.
  • Russia, Esop in, 457.
  • Rutty, Dr., a quaker, confession of, 510.
  • Rydal Mount, seat of Wordsworth, 276.
  • Sackville, sir E. and lord Bruce, duel between, 225.
  • Saddles, rules touching, 357.
  • Sailors, 298.
  • Saint Giles’s bowl, 702.
  • —— John’s Well, at Harpham, engraving, 545.
  • —— Romuald, 593.
  • “Sally Holt,” a story, 669.
  • Sandy, James, an extraordinary artist, 680.
  • Sanitary cordon, 493, 495.
  • “Sappho and Phaon,” old play, 265.
  • Satellites, 377.
  • Saville, sir G., letter to, 492.
  • Sawston Cross, 81.
  • Saxons, customs of, 38.
  • Scandal, picture of, 61.
  • Scarfs and tippets, 235.
  • Scheveling scenery, 460.
  • “School of Adults,” 662.
  • Schools, chastisement in, 174; schoolboys’ anticipations of home, 268.
  • Sciences and arts, skill of the ancients in.—See Ancients.
  • Scotland, customs in, 23, 40, 143; Scotch lairds and judges, 255; Highland emigration, 322; forests of Scotland, 324.
  • Scott, sir Walter, letter of, to sir A. Ferguson, 508.
  • ——, Thomas, shepherd, anecdote of, 510.
  • Sculpture of the ancients, 825.
  • Sects, exclusiveness of, 808.
  • Selden, notice of, 572.
  • Self-devotion, clerical, 536.
  • Self-esteem, 751.
  • Selling and buying, 211.
  • Sensualist and his conscience, 410.
  • Servants; servant maid’s pocket-book, 404; old and faithful servants, 818.
  • Servetus and his works, 726.
  • Session, court of, satire on judges of, 255.
  • “Shakerley, my aunt,” 663.
  • Shakspeare, Time’s rival, 339, 340.
  • Sham-fights and invasion, 55.
  • Sheep, their injury to young woods, 324; superstition touching sheep and mice, 467; sheep-shearing in Cumberland, 559.
  • Sheepshanks, Whittle, 267.
  • Sheriffs, female, 571.
  • Ships, descent of one over Niagara falls, 531.
  • Shirley Common, broom-maker’s at, 449.
  • Shirts, wearing two in travelling, 352.
  • Shoeblacks, notices respecting, 435.
  • Shoemakers, an ambitious one, 341.
  • Shoes, old, curious application of, 318.
  • Shorland, Lord, old legend and monument of, 300, 317.
  • Showers, summer, 253.
  • Shuttle, hanging the, 221.
  • Siam, summer-house in, 253.
  • Signs; sign-seeking, 412; curious signs, 448, 504, 756.
  • Silchester, Hants, Roman station, 556.
  • Simcoe, general, notice of, 422.
  • Singing, test of excellence of, 210.
  • “Sir Giles Goosecap,” old play, 329.
  • Skimmington, procession called, 360.
  • Skipton in Craven. See Craven.
  • Sleeves, pockets formerly in, 231.
  • Smith, Thomas, a quack, 722.
  • Smoking and snuffing, oriental temple for, 673, 679; antiquity of smoking, 771.
  • Snitzler, an honest organ-builder, 26.
  • Snuffing and smoking, 673, &c.; Laurence-kirk snuff-boxes, 680.
  • Soames, Dr., master of Peterhouse, 264.
  • Soldiers; a soldier’s age, 352; a soldier’s return, 576.
  • Somerset, proud duke of, 751.
  • Son, father and, 31.
  • Sophia Charlotte, sister of Geo. I., 479.
  • Southey, poet, residence of, 282.
  • Spa-fields, sketch in, 764.
  • Spaniards, spare diet of, 772.
  • Spanish mysteries, 113; punctilio, 254.
  • Speculation, folly of, 352.
  • Spinning, tenuity of, 85.
  • Spit, movement of to music, 204.
  • “Spoons, Apostle,” 817.
  • Stanley, Rev. T., rector of Eyam, 629.
  • Starch-wort, an herb, account of, 369.
  • “Stare and Gossip, the,” 61.
  • Stars, fixed, the, 375, 795.
  • Statesmen, model of, 429.
  • ——, small farming proprietors called, 378.
  • Statues, stupendous, 823.
  • Steam-engines, 85.
  • Steel manufacturers, 600.
  • Stones, (precious) ancients’ imitation of, 745.
  • Stories, (long) 210.
  • Storks, habits and treatment of, 464, 564.
  • Strutt, Mr., new edition of his “Sports and Pastimes,” &c. by editor of the Table Book, 177.
  • Stuarts, (The) unfortunate line of, 398.
  • Summer; summer-house at Siam, 253; summer showers, an effect of, 253; summer garden of Peter the Great, 457.
  • Surgery, skill of the ancients in, 742, 746.
  • Sweetheart-seeing, 159.
  • Sympathy, supposed effect of, 334.
  • Table Book, editor of about to publish a cheap edition of “Strutt’s Sports and Pastimes,” 177; editor’s severe domestic afflictions, 737.
  • Table rock at Niagara, 541.
  • Tailor, origin of the word, 717.
  • Talbot inn, Borough, 45.
  • Talkington, George, casualties that befell, 127.
  • Tanner, Dame, gleaning cake of, 346.
  • Tasting days, 447.
  • Taverns and inns, notices of, 41, &c. 49, &c.
  • Taylor, John, of Birmingham, notice of, 595.
  • Temple of Health, Dr. Graham’s, 561; for smoking, Mr. Gliddon’s, 673.
  • Temple, Sir W., disposal of his heart, 460.
  • Tenter, (Bear and) boys’ play, 364.
  • Thales and other ancients, 819. See Ancients.
  • Theatres. See Plays.
  • Thunder, opinions on, 632.
  • Tippets and scarfs, 235.
  • Thomson, poet, notices of, 108, 378, 588.
  • Thou and you, in poetry, 332.
  • Thread and thread-makers, 603.
  • “Thyestes,” old play, 645.
  • Tides, opinions on, 634.
  • Tie and bob wigs, 434.
  • “Time, the defeat of,” 335.
  • Titles, 752.
  • Tobacco, or a substitute, ancient use of, 771. See Ancients.
  • Toll, ungallant, 243.
  • Tours, a curious one, 291.
  • Townsend, (Bow street) evidence by, 149.
  • Trade, good and ill of, 211.
  • Tradition, picture of, 366.
  • Tragi-comedy and pastoral comedy, 621.
  • “Traitor, (The)” old play, 580.
  • Transmigration, explanatory of antipathies, 191.
  • Trashing, 348.
  • Travelling, precautions for, 352, 364.
  • Treasure-digging, patent for, 413.
  • Treaties; one between W. Penn and the Indians, 417, &c.; treaty of Uxbridge, 521.
  • Trees; skeletons of, 325; a memorable elm, 421; noble trees near Amsterdam, 461; superstition about passing patients through a split ash, 465; trees poetically and nationally considered, 469; height of the cabbage tree, 471.
  • Tricks of the Fairies, 339.
  • “Triumphant Widow, (The)” old play, 232.
  • Troller’s Gill, (The) 653.
  • Tromp, Van, gallantry of, 773.
  • “True Trojans, (The)” old play, 328.
  • Turk, the Great, 754.
  • Turnpikeman, (The) 684.
  • Tuum et Meum, 250.
  • “Twins, (The)” old play, 329.
  • Ugliness, naif admission of, 414.
  • Umbrella, clergyman’s, 101.
  • Usurers; life of one, 72; a liberal one, 808.
  • Utopia, (sir T. More’s) blunder about, 413.
  • Uxbridge, town and treaty of, 521.
  • Vega, Francis de la, adventures of, 188.
  • ——, Lopez de, mysteries of, 113.
  • Venice, 251.
  • Venison, potted, curious notion about, 334.
  • Vines, notices about, 33, 628. See Grapes.
  • Viper’s poison, 764.
  • Virtue and Death, dialogue between, 19.
  • Voice, restoration of, by anchovy, 544.
  • Volunteer reminiscences, 55.
  • Vortices, doctrine of, 377.
  • Wagstaff, Mr. E., 185.
  • Wake-Robin, a plant, 369.
  • Wakefield, custom near, 21.
  • Walker (Willy) and John Bolton, 409.
  • Waller, sir E., his tomb at Beaconsfield, 469.
  • Walpole, sir H., and Hogarth, 290, 291.
  • —— sir R., notice of, 192.
  • Walls of plaster advised for fruit, 141.
  • Wards, court of, abuses of, 76.
  • “Wars of Cyrus,” old play, 621.
  • Warwickshire, custom in, 466.
  • Watchmen, (London) 523.
  • Water having the effect of fire, 535.
  • Wedding. See Marriage.
  • “Weston Favel History, &c.,” remarks on, 366.
  • “Whims and Oddities,” by T. Hood, 559.
  • Whittington, revolution house at, 513.
  • Wight, Isle of, custom in, 714.
  • Wigs, formerly general, 434.
  • Wilson, Rev. Mr., curious tract by, 252.
  • ——, professor of moral philosophy, notices of, 279.
  • Wiltshire, custom in, 197.
  • Winter flowers, 737.
  • Witchcraft, decree against, 144; “burning the witch,” 582; guard against witchcraft, 583; the wise woman of Littondale, 776.
  • Wives; Mr. E. Wagstaff’s, 185; lively letter from one, 442; consolation for loss of one, 479; evidence of affection in wives, 544; a wife taking liberties, 751.
  • Wizard’s Cave, 747, 750.
  • Wolves; forests burnt in Scotland to exterminate them, 324.
  • Women; customs at lying-in, 23; former freedom of society with men, 40, 41; Egyptian compliment to, 405; ingenuous admission of ugliness by one, 414; a young one’s pocket-book, 404; women sheriffs and justices, 571; antiquarians’ supposed dislike to, 572; dower of women, 573; an amiable woman described, 682; “The Wise Woman of Littondale,” 777. See Wives.
  • Wood feast, 455.
  • Wood, Antony à, his dislike of women, 572.
  • Wood, Nicholas, a glutton, 350.
  • Wordsworth, (poet) notices of, 273.
  • Worlds, plurality of, 375.
  • Wrestling, 416, 499.
  • Wright, (Mrs.) her description of Niagara falls, 538.
  • Writing, Peruvian substitute for, 112; writing-desks, 193, 196.
  • Wye Dale, 13.
  • Years, reason for not counting, 352.
  • York, and the revolution, 514.
  • Yorkshire customs, 99, 144, 348, 505.
  • Young, (Mr. S.) of Keston Cross, 36.