Cavado, river of, 274. Cave, the Blowing Cave of Virginia, 585. Wonderful one, at the foot of a steep mountain between Baru- thum and Tripoli, 615. Cayman, the buoyancy of, 525. His flesh not good owing to the flavour of musk, 578. Offensive to snakes, 587. CECIL, and the Pomegranate tree, 424.
Celebes, aged warrior of, and
his Kris, 424. Rice grounds in the, 442. Ceremony and Gentility, Cow- ley's account of a soldier being a martyr to, 327. Ceylon, novel agriculture in,
419. Deer catching in, ib. Hunters of, 449. Chaco Grub that produces milk, 527. Chain-pump, 621,
Chair, the placing of, dispute concerning, 341. Challenge of Pedro of Aragon to Pedro of Castille, 330. Chamber secret, of Hindoo Princes, 417. Chamfrain, what? 344. Chancels, no popery, 2, 68. Chaplain, naval, 13.
CHARLES I., Bishop Hacket's
remarks on, 145. Orders to examine his body, 146. Es- cape of, advised by a maid- servant, in her own clothes, 162. His desire to do pe- nance for the injustice done to Strafford, 164, 190. In- stance of insincerity in, 179. Said that the fire in Scot- land threatened not only the monarchical government there, but in England also, 188. Lamentable willing- ness to make scape goats of his faithful servants, and duplicity, no doubt forced upon him by the times, 189. Says of the Scotch, The Devil owes them a shame,' 190. Account of his death from the "Royal Buckler," 324. Philip Henry's ac- count of the popular groan at the execution of, 643. Renewal of Henry VII.'s statute against depopulation,
CHARLES VII., Les Vigilles de, 57.
CHARRON, on Oriental know- ledge, 407. CHARPENTIER, paid by the French court for writing its apology, 193. CHARTIER, ALAN, 352. CHAUCER, extracts from, 315, &c.
Chaun, the Indian Congreve
Rocket, or Lattie, 408. Cheerfulness, Moravian pattern of, 10.
CHENIER, his account of the
Moors and their negroes, 491.
CHERBURY, LORD HERBERT
of, his advice to Charles not to listen to the Scots; but fortify York against them,
Cherries, German sauce of, 591. Cherry-gum, nourish- ment of, 598. Chesnut wood, inflammability of, 295.
Chien, La Rivière du, 482. China, sea vegetable of, 432. Chittery, or, Royal Race, mar- riage choice of, 489. Chocolate, derivation of, 593. Choultry, what? 499. Chrism, account of, 383.
CLANRICARD, LORD, Straf- ford's complaint of his en- grossing parsonages and vi- carages in Ireland, 199. CLARENDON, LORD, on the death of Archbishop Laud, 136. The place whence he took his title, 138. Claren- don papers referred to, with extracts from, 139, &c. State papers, extracts from, 187-191. Painful view of the distractions of the times, 189. His opinion that the Scots would not betray the king, 190.
Clay, eating of, by the Otho- macos and Guamos explain- ed, 527.
Clepsydra, the Brahmin's, 473. Clergy, benefit of, 10. The
support of, wise arrange ment, 43. Disrespectful treatment of, in England, ib. Claim of our Clergy and flocks at home, 74. Want of, 102. Poverty of, 103. King of Spain's boun-
ty to, in New Spain and the Philippines, 658. Clerk, Parish, instance of the whole service read by, on the authority of Wesley, 108. CLIVE, LORD, and the chest of gold, 656. CLOCESTRA'S, MARTIN
DE, translation of L'Histoire de Bretaigne from the Latin into the Romaunt, 358. Cloths, disuse of English men- tioned by G. Wither, 302. Clouds, attraction of, 599. Green, 614.
Clubs! Clubs! the Prentice cry of, 322. Club-men, defeat of, by Crom- well, 161.
Cobra, blood stones of, 413. COCKBURN, JOHN, journey
and adventures of, 534, 535. Cocoa Nuts, large ones of Ma-
dura and Baly, 420, 434. Coffee Balls, the food of the Galla, 589.
Coffee House, 666.
COKE, his opinion that the change in Irish tenures is the only hope of introducing in Ireland civility and reli- gion, 183. Bacon's saying of, 207.
COLET, JOHN, the best and
wisest of his age, 332. COMINES, PHILIP DE, quoted, 345.
Commons, House of, former mo-
deration and honesty of, 664. Compadres, relationship of,269. Comparisons, Hindoo, 435. Condorona, the mine of, how discovered by the Spaniards,
Confession, Roman Catholic, warning against, by Bishop Watson the Catholic, 124. Difference of in the Canons of the Irish Church, 202. Conformist and Non-Con- formist, friendly debate be- tween, 93, 94, 104, 118. Conger Eel, power of, 577. Congo, the lutes of, 473. Conscience, tenderness of, mis-
use of the term, 107. A back door,' writes Nicholas, 1647, to let in all sects and heresies, 190.
Constantinople, coffee intro- duced at, 363.
CRANMER, ARCHBISHOP, on unholy alliances in Ger- many, 125. Creed, the,-the parts of it al- lotted to the several Apos- tles, 380.
Creeshna, the city of, 481. Crickets of the Night, Primi- tive christians, why so call- ed, 390.
CROFT, BISHOP, the humble moderator, 52. On the sur plice question, 121. Va- riety of men's understand- ings, 125. CROMWELL, collections con- cerning his age, 127, &c. &c. Letters, ib. Lays Ma- nasseh Ben Israel's proposal before a meeting, 145. Pic- ture of, at Gisburne Park, 147. His fight with two mastiff's at Cambridge, 151. Bayle's account of his fana- ticism, 154. Said by Sir J. Reresby to be the greatest dissembler on earth, 155. His dying advice, 663. CROMWELL, RICHARD, letters written from Cheshunt, con- taining an account of his death, &c. 191. Cross, the sign of, refused to be made by many to the solemn league and covenant, and left incomplete in the shape of a T., 15. Legend of Adam and the Tree of Paradise, 382. Queen of Sheba and, 382.
Crosses, gold and silver ones,
Dance, primitive, 315. Danes, suggestion as to why they have so few coughs and catarrhs, 594. Date-tree, virtues of, 428. The honey of, 463. Re- sorted to by the White- Heron, 483.
DAVENANT'S news from Ply- mouth, quoted, 359. DAVILA, taught our gamesters, says Clarendon, 146. Day and Night, local difference of, 616.
Dead, Indian regard for the
graves of their, 656. Dead men, more hurtful than
the living, an aboriginal no- tion of savage tribes, 538. How likeness comes out in the dead, 659. Death of the Good, 121. Debat, Le, des deux Fortunes d'Amours, 352.
Deformed persons, none among the native Indians, 530. Dehly, cunning robbers of the province of, 410. Deluge, Lake near the town of
Ali, a remainder of, 444. Dervises of Erzeroom, 403. Desert Cookery, 481. Effects of a desert march, 501. Of water, inland tribes astonish- ment at, 514. Destruicam de Espanha, ex- tract from, 269. Devetas, their respect to the moon, 483.
Devil, giving a chair to, and talking a matter cut with,
119. Indian superstition of | Doublets, thieves clad in stone
sacrificing to, 653. Dewal, the real name for an Indian temple, Pagoda not known in the native lan- guages, 433. Dews, heavy, in the forests of the Ohio and Wabash, 593. Diamonds, splendid ones of Cambay, Ispahan, &c. 418. Increase of, 468. Digitus Medicus, or, fourth fin-
ger of the left hand, 318, 333. Dimbios, the, or, great red
ants of Ceylon, 589. DINEZ, ANTONIE, his Hiso- paida, 250. DINEZ, D., 279.
Discernans Les, et les Mélan- gistes, 103.
Discipline, religious, first in- troduced into an army by the prince of Parma, 142. Discussion, unhallowed, 32. Dispensations, 290. Disputants, plausibility of Po- pish, 5. Dissent, infallibility of, 105. Diver, red-throated, of the Feroe Islands, 587. Divines, Tetrarchs of time, 7. DOBRIZHOFFER, covert allu- sion to mules, 532. Curious cure for the springhalt, 535. DODD, CHARLES, his Church History of England, quoted, 148, 149. DODDRIDGE, DR., anecdote of,
Dog, Methodist, story of, 63. Dogs tongue, drives away rats,
Dogs, instinct of, 288. Red dog of the Savana-Durga, 424. Remedy against mad- ness in, 597. Voracity of, in Guatemala, 650. DOMINGO, SAINT, 397-400. What passed between the De- vil and Saint Domingo, 401. Don, description of a proud one, 341.
DONNE'S SERMONS, Vade ad Apem, 111.
Dorislaus, an agent of the par- liament, killed at the Hague,
Dover Castle, precautions a- gainst undermining, 343. Dore, the, that led Cortes and his followers, 266.
Dragon, African, engendered by the great eagle on the female hyæna, 587. Dress, remarks on, 310, 311, 313, 314, 320. Superfluous bravery, 337. Suffocating
manner of attire, ib. Druids, sorceries of, 28. DRUM, his idea of a material Church, 2.
Drums, why bullet-proof, 657. Drunkard, privileged one a- mong the Turks, his dis- grace, 452. Dublin, most dangerous for corrupting youth, in Straf- ford's opinion, 200. Dublin College, Strafford's wish for good scholars from England to be sent over to be made fellows, 199. Ducks, use of, in turnip fields,
Duelling, curse of, 20. lers, a word to, 306. Dumbarton, with proper inti- mation, Strafford says, he could have secured it, " a- gainst all the covenanters and deists in Scotland,' 172. Dundee, the great misfortune of the taking of, 150. Dung, custom of plastering floors with cow-dung in the East, 415, 416.
DUNTON, MRS., her funeral sermon by Timothy Rogers, 639.
DURYE, JOHN, employed un- der Laud for many years in trying to effect a union a- mong the Protestants, after- wards became a Bellwether in seditious preaching, 191. Duties to God, from Laws and Ordinances of Warre, which might be profitably adhered to in 1849, 664. Dyeing, mystery of, 336. Dutch skill in, ib.
Eagle, White, his attack on the Kangaroo, 586. Ameri- can, 605. Earthquake, curious effects of, on the pendulums of the clocks in Batavia, 649. Eastern chambers, where to
take the air, according as the wind blows, 490. Ecbatana, walls of, built by Deioces, Herodotus' account of, 421.
Eclipse, superstitions on, 462. EDMONDBURY, ST., his shrine, and the thief at, 51. EDMONDSON, WILLIAM, the quaker, his goodness, 122. Eel Pies, horse loads brought from Mantes to the market of Paris, according to Mon- strellet, 340.
Egypt, the glory of, from December till March, 449. Beauty of portions of, 492. Ancient custom of removing the dead in, 496. The mo- notony of, 499. Ejaculations, Fuller's remarks upon, 42.
Ελαιοφορία, collection of ver- ses printed at Oxford on Oliver Cromwell's peace with the Dutch, 151. Elder-tree, medicinal effects of, 601.
Elections, much the same, as
regards purity, &c., in Charles I.'s time, as now,
ESCOBAR'S collection of bal-
Essenes and Pharisees, 369. Estoc Volant, L', what? 348. Etymology, an extract from the limbo of, 620. EURIC, the Fratricide, king of the Visigoths, 282. Evergreen Creepers, none in America, 644. EVELYN, witness of Strafford's execution, for a crime that came under the cognizance of no human law, 163. EVLIA, the traveller, fre- quently quoted, e. g. 434, 442, &c., &c.
Evora, College of Jesuits at, founded by Cardinal Henri- que, 391, 393. Ewes, Milch, six for one cow, in Tusser's time, 325. Excommunication, Adam, the first that underwent the sen- tence of, 384. Experiences, account of, 38. Experiments on odours and insects might ascertain the only preservatives against the greatest plagues to which men are subject, 597. Extempore preaching, Origen the first beginner of, 122. "Extinguishers of the Candle," Persians railed at by the name of, 444. Extremes meet, illustrated in Protestant mission persecu- tion, 61.
Eye, "If thine eye offend thee pluck it out," literal appli- cation of the saying by a Mahommedan, 403. A one- eyed man a bad attendant on an Indian chief in the other world, 530.
Denton, why spared by FISHER, Laud's book against,
Prince Rupert, 157. Faith, to die in, 359. Falkland Islands, increase of cattle in, 642.
Fall, or Falling Band, what?
well digested by Charles I., 134. Recommended to his children, with Bishop An-
drews's sermons, and Hook- er, 136. Fishing, expertness of the A- merican tribes in, 524. Flamingoes, great flocks on the Caspian shores, 588. Flea, St. Domingo and, 401. FLECKNO, his account of JoAN IV., 260. Use of foreign language, 327. Account of the stars of the other hemi- sphere, 523.
FLEMINGS, ancient arms of, 358.
Flowers, language of, 666. Floods, great ones in the East,
Flying-fish, tail of, 598. FOE DE, and the Flying Post- minus the F, 332. FORDUN, quoted, 357. Fornication, extended sense of,
333. ANDREW, extract
from his theatre and honour of knighthood, 319. Felony in the king's chapel at Whitehall, and Sir Francis
Bacon's remark on passing judgment on John Selman,
Fennel, the herb, 323. FENTON'S tour through Pem- brokeshire, quoted, 320. Females, excess of, the effect of polygamy, 644. Feoffment, the, the good that
might have resulted from it in Charles I.'s time, 153. FERNAM LOPEZ, quoted, 263, 272, 280, 282, 285. FERNANDO DON, EL NOBLE REY, 287.
FERREIRA DONNA BERNARDA DE LACERDA, 250. Ferro, slaves of the isle of, 261. Feudal times, the heir the suc. cessor to quarrels in, 340. FIENNES, MRS. MSS. quoted, 343, 600.
Fire Temple of Erdeshir, 420.
Naptha the fuel of, 420. Fire-fly, brilliancy of, 434, 605. Fire-Eaters, Indian, 560. Fish stunned by the striking of the ice, 601. Indian way of taking, 605.
Forest-work Hangings, 619. Fortune, instance of the muta- bility of, 151.
FORBES, Oriental Memoirs,
quoted, 411, &c. Snakes of the Guzerat lakes, 411. Luxury of cold water in In- dia, 412. Halcarras, or, In- dian news messengers Palanquin-bearers, and the round of beef- The Parsee tribe, and the everlasting fire The Mowah-tree, 412. Eastern hospitality— Indian holy breds, or sacred lands, 413. Noble genero- sity of a Chinese merchant, 415, &c. &c. Great floods of the East, 427. Account of Locust-flight, 432. Gu- lam Kauder Khan and Shah Aalum, 440.
Fostering, advantages of, 362. Fotoona, islanders of, the bru. tal custom of fighting with shark's teeth, 352. Foundations out of joint, 17. Fox GASTAM DE, 249. FRANCISCANS, 370, &c. 395. Aped by the Dominicans, 396. House and church of, at Nanking, 628. FRANCISCO JOZE DE NATIVI- DADE, 252.
Franeker, the grand hot-bed of the rankest Ca'vinism, 192. Fraternity, levelling, 639. FREEMAN'S Eighteen Sermons quoted, 72.
French, the Spaniards' Opinion of, as expressed in the Cen- tinela contra Franceses, 270. 286. French fashions, 629. Lying, 659.
Freyre Luys de, 240. FRIENDLY DEBATE between Conformist and Nonconform- ist, 93.
Frounce and Flounce, meaning of the words, 320. Frozen Trees, beautiful appear- ance of, 583. Fruit Trees, way of propagat- ing in China, 589. Fuci and Alga, nutritive pow ers of, 600. FULLER, DR., enabled to make use of any man's sermon he had but once read or heard, 206. Worthies and Triple Reconciler quoted, 345, 6. Account of Pharisees, 369. On a leaden bullet, 637. Pope Pius IV.'s ship, and the har- bour of Sandwich, in Kent, 650. The Great Turk and the English musicians, 654. Mortality of London in Ful- ler's days, 667. Story of the Sagamore and his notch cane, 667. Furs, common use of, by our forefathers, 335. The leaner the animal the better the fur, 578.
FURSEUS SAINT, 122.
GAGE, THOMAS, his account of Mexico, a verbatim plagia rism, from "The pleasant historie of the conquest of Weast India, &c." 571. Gainsborough, capture of, 155. Gala, Coplas que hizo Sacro de Ribera sobre la, 211. Galla, the food of, 589. Poly- gamy of, 615. Gallantry, French, instance of,
Galway, Strafford's account of, 182. Gamron, houses of the city of,
and their air turrets, 512. GARCILASO DE LA VEGA, 231.
GARCIORDONEZ DE MONTAL- vo, 279.
Gardefui, or Gardefan, 634. Garlic, an antidote for the bad effects of the Simoom, 649. Evlia's account of the Sa- tanic origin of, ib. GASCOIGNE,
extracts from, His country delight,
619. GASPAR DE VILLAGRA, Histo- ria de la Nueva Mexico, a palpable and paltry imita- tion of the Araucana, 231. GATO JUAN ALVAREZ, 218, 224, 216.
Gay Head, Indian reserve lands at, 627. Gear fained, what? 3. Geliana, the palaces of, 282. GEMELLI CARRERI, 467, &c. GENAIS, MADAME, her ac- count of Madame Elizabeth, 662.
Gentoos, possessed of the ro- sary, 400.
Gerizim, Mount, the brazen bird of, 653. GERONIMO DEL RIO. Al Vir-
gin. Villancico, 213. Getæ, the, 623. GIBSON, account of gold dis- covered by an Irish harper's song, 361.
GILPIN BERNARD, "the north- ern apostle," and the chal- lenge glove, 24. The deadly feod at Rothbury, 26. ministry, 33. Gin, Dutch antidote against the ague, 650. GIROLANO CONESTAGGIO, and
his history, 265. GLAS CAPTAIN, retributive justice exemplified in the ex- ecution of his murderers, 100.
Glass spiritual, 343. Glastonbury, the holy thorn at, cut down by the fana- tics in the civil wars, 150. Gloucester, the shipwreck of, in 1682, 652. Gloves, embroidered,
duced by Edward Vere, se- venteenth Earl of Oxford,
Golden Disease, which affect- ed Cortez and his followers, 291.
Goldsmiths' Shops in London, in Fynes Moryson's time, their splendour, 335. GOMARA, his doubts as to the appearance of Santiago and St. Pedro, 59.
GOMEZ, ANTONIO HENRIQUEZ, Sanson Nazareno, por, 251. GOMES FRANCISCO DIAS, ac- count of, 245-248. GONGORA, his style, and ex- tracts, 209.
Gongs, or, Gomgoms, how made and their use, 489. GONZALO DE CORDOVA, and Martin Affonzo, 265. Government, benefit of the su- premacy of one person in,
GOWER, extracts from, 307, &c. Early mention of cur- tains Gentle knights' courteousness-Lady's side- saddle, ib. — Knight combat on foot-Early instance of laying the money on the book at marriage — Early Beguines, 308.
Graal, or, Greal, meaning of,
635. Extracts from St. Gre- all, ib. GRANDPRÉ, quoted, 505. Ac- count of the Malay Kriss, 506. Earth of Mahe for fil- tering water, 507. Super- stitious offerings, 508. Grace, growth in, 78.
trine of universal, 126. Grapes, preserved in vinegar,
GREENWOOD, PAUL, the Preacher, his aberration of mind in his last illness, 125. GREGORY NAZIANZEN. Car- men de vitâ suâ, 102. Grenada, 282. GROTIUS, through Pocock, en- treated Laud to escape, if he could, 134. His high opi- nion of Strafford, 163. Ex.
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