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144. Formerly applied to
miniatures, or pictures in
little, 336.
Meditation, Jeremy Taylor's
remarks on, 45.
Medoc, derivation of, according
to Bollendus, 608.
Meekness, the way to win gain-
sayers, 66.

MEITZADE, the tomb of, 521.
MELIADUS, quoted, 319, 320,
325, 332.

Mendoza, in Chili, the vine-
yards of, 533.

Menu, Institutes of, quoted,
422, 432, 433, 461, 463, 492,
503, 504.

Men milliners, 301.

Merida, the windmills of, 648.
MERLIN, prophecies of, 344,

348.

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Methodists, labour of the local

preachers among, 32.
Metre, remarks on Spanish and
Portuguese, 249.
Mexicans, bloody religion of,
and their predisposition
thereby to receive the Chris-
tian faith, 62. Atrocious
custom of, 522.
Mexico, extreme heat in the
sound of, 533.
MICHAELIS, remarks on blas-
phemous thoughts, 117.
MICHELTON, MARY, impostor,
inspired in favour of the Co-
venant, 195.
MICKLE'S curious account of
Portuguese sacred drama as
represented at Lisbon in
1780, 289.
Microscopic animals, wonders
of, 116.

MIDDLE AGES, &c. 295, &c.
MIEDES, the historian, rascally
remarks of, 291. His men-
tion of K. Jayme el Con-
questador's skill in surgery,
318, 319, 326, 330.
Miges, natural courage of, 537.
Milicia Indiana, by D. Ber-
nardo de Vargas Machuca.
Cotton cloths used as a de-
fence against the arrows of
the Chichimecos - Recom-
mendation of short swords-
Long hair a hold for the
enemy, 643. The sayo, or

INDEX.

coat of cotton-Ear pieces
of the Morion hinder the
word of command, 644.
Millstone of Novogorod and St.
Antony, 621.

MILTON, defends the regicides
by quotations from Calvin
and his followers, 191. "No
Bishop no King," manufac-
tured out of the Aphorism,
"One Pope and one King,"

395.

Mimosa tree, a guide to water
in the desert, 580.
Minarets, Quære? Were they
ever used as beacons ? 445.
The shaking minarets at the
mosque of Jethro, 447.
Minever, what? 335.
Minho el Rio, 270.
Ministers, aged, the duty of
providing for, 35. Painful
treatment of, 36.
Mint and Pimento, Turkish
drink of, 647.

Miracles never cease, 7. Lying
miracles, 57. Day of, gone
by: vain claim of the Romish
Church, 98. False, 119.
Question of evidence con-
cerning a remarkable one,

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683

black earth of Peru to make
ink of, 574.
MONASTIC ORDERS, Notes for,
&c. 369, &c. All favoured
by the Pope as lessening
the power of the bishops,

396.
MONETARIUS, THOMAS, insur-
rection of German peasants
encouraged by, 119.
Monkey catching, 588.
MONMOUTH, GEOFFREY OF,

386.

MONSTRELLET, quoted, 340.
Badge and arms of the Count
d'Armagnac, 341, 349, 356.
MONTAIGNE, quoted, 205, 207.
Monterey, extraordinary state-

ment as to the immense num-
ber of cattle in the neigh-
bourhood of, 523.
MONTEZUMA's way of keeping

up the population in poison-
ous districts, 522. Descrip-
tion of the ambassador of,
535.

MONTRO,ANTONIO DE, impiety
of his poetry, 240.
Moon, rising, dispels clouds,

615. Speech of men in, 651.
Moorish metre, specimen of,
242. Customs adopted by
the Spanish women, 270.
MORALES, quoted, 283, 378,
&c. 381, 382.

MORE, SIR THOMAS, and study,
14. On the question of
sanctuary, 90.
MORE, HENRY, 333, 334.
MORELL, quoted from the

Mass. Hist. Coll. Indian cun-
ning and training, 660, 661.
MORETON, BISHOP, self-devo-
tion of, during the Plague,

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INDEX.

Huge ones seen by Flinders
near Point Possession, 647.
NICHOLAS, SAINT, tale of, from
the Roman Breviary, 80.
NICHOLS, JAMES, Calvinism
and Arminianism compared,
extracts from, 191, &c.
NICHOLSON and BURN'S, Cum-
berlant and Westmoreland,
quoted, 295, 321, 323. Tra-
velling expenses in 1656,
325. Trial by combat of
arms, 338.
NIECAMP, quoted, 428. Plea-
santness of eastern evenings,
430.

Nijaguma, wonderful book of,

404.

NIMROD, the first who wore a
crown, 450.
Niwegal Sands, 631.
Nonconforming Ministers, cha-
racteristic anecdote of one,

31.

Northern Signs of Spring and
Summer, 632.
NOTHISDALE, EARL OF, Straf-
ford delays admitting to be
of the Council, because he is
a Papist, 181.

Novus Homo, splendour of, 636.
NUNEZ DE QUIROS, El Nuncu
por, 219.
Nunjengode, massacre of priests
at the temple of, 448.
Nurses, under what circum-

stances Gonzalo Gustios re-
commended two, 639.

0.

Oak, evergreen oak of Devon-
shire, 596.

Oars, by way of sails, 618.
Oath, the old tradesman's at
Lucca, 661.
Oboe - Hautboy

QUÆRE, a
corruption of Theorbo, 333.
Occupations of Scripture Cha-
racters, 402.

O'HALLORAN's account of Oil-
liol and the lovely Moriat,
355. Airghtheach, or, of
silver, origin of the term,
362. Moran the Wise, 363.
Oil, wounds cured with, and
the wounded blessed and
psalmed, 51.
Balsamic of
Kentucky and Tenessee,645.
Old use of to still the waves,
649.

OLIVAM, PEDRO de, and the
Franciscans, 57.

to

Olive trees of the Morea, their
value first brought into no-
tice by the Venetians, 578.
Ollamh-Filea Feircheirtne, who
and what, 343.
OLYMPIAS and the serpent, 422.
Omens, with reference
Charles I. 141.
Onion, a nostrum
plague, 339.
Opium, use of among the Turks,
and the casuistical question
as to the use of brandy, 447.
ORATORIANS, 377.

for the

Orchards, rapid growth of the
first American settlers, 657.
ORDERS, Notes for the Religi-
ous, &c. 368, &c.
Ordination, question of canoni-
cal, 15.

Orja, the marvellous tree of,
that portends war, 448.
Oriental Sports. quoted, 407,
414, 430. State of the Na-
bob Vizier of Oude's coun-
try, 441.
ORIENTALIANA, or Eastern and
Mohammedan Collections,
402, &c.

ORIGEN, his conjectures and
opinions turned into here-
sies, 78.

Original Sin, 3.
ORMONDE,the man in the world
the Irish rebels shewed most
hatred to, 189. "The most
excellent subject the King is
Lord of,' says Clarendon,
190. The Ormonde family
traditionally supposed to be
the heirs of Becket, 203.
Ormus, prevention against the
excessive heat in the isle of,

424.

OSANA, SAINT, and the rector's
concubine, 51.

Osmanlu, transparent stones of
the mosque of, at Tauris,
460, 461.

OSSAT, CARDINAL DE, in his

latter days, from what he
had heard and seen of them,
could not recommend the
restoration of the Jesuits,
374.

Ostriches, account of, 585.
Otaheitan funeral prayer, 634.
Othomacos of the Orinoco, their

lamentations over their dead

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Achilles
331.

-

Arms of

- Hector arming,

Palatinate, war with, aversion
of Strafford to-One of the
most considerable passages
Went-
in his Letters, 169.
worth advises to secure it,
180.

Palm-tree, climacteric of, 464.
Male and female trees, ib.
Utility of, 502.
Pamphlets, corrupt ones, Ga-
briel Harvey's Expostula-
tion against, 651.
Paned-hose, what? 322.
Papal Darkness, 8. Intrigues

of France with the Papists,
181. Advice of the Pope
that the Papists should not
be too ready to furnish
Charles I. with money, 188.
To be converted by the
sword in one hand and the
Bible in the other, 196. Pa-
pists in Ireland, in Claren-
don's time, reckoned
twenty to one, 203.
Papyrus, 508.

as

Parable, Indian, on the subject
of God, 437.
PARASU-RAMA, account of,

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INDEX.

PARSONS, SIR WILLIAM, a
knave of the first water, 204.
Father Parsons, 317.
Party-divisions, evil of, 67.
Passion, a sign of honesty in
Lord Keeper Guildford's
opinion, 205.
Pastors, why formerly in con-
stant motion, 97.
Paternoster Row, formerly in-

habited by mercers and silk-
men, 619.

PATRICK, SAINT, and the spirit
that prayed in his inside, 13.
His Horn, 51. A wonder-
ful Preacher, 124.
PAUL V. Petition of eleven
Priests confined in Newgate
to, 83.
Pauperism, increased danger
of, 609.

Peace, the true way to, to put
out the seeds of sedition and
rebellion, 665.
Pea-fowls, of Jungleterry and
Terriagully, 431.
241.
PEDRO DEL REY D.
Chronica de Conde Don, 277,
280.

Pelican, why called the Cha-

meau d'eau, 458.
Pellets, of the Owl or Eagle,
645.

his visit

PEMBROKE, EARL of,
to Oxford, 323.
Pemican, food of the Chepe-
wyans and other Indians,
how made, 644.
Penitence, gate of, 108.
People, bad and good every-
where, 94.

Romance
PERAZA, ALONSO DE,
fecho por el Bachiller, 222.
PERCEVAL, Romance of, quot-
ed, 367.
PEREIRA, GABRIEL DE CAS-
TRO, 214.

PEREYRA LYS, his Elegiada,

237.

Pero Nino, Spanish expression
of, 615.
PERRONET, CHARLES, in com-

munion with the Father and
the Son, 22.
Persecution, desire of Charles
I. and the Bishops to do
away with, 188.
Persia, Funeral of the Kings
of, 431.

Persian Botany Bay, 403. No-
tion that no house endureth

which is built by oppression,
445. Beggars buried up to
the neck, on the anniversary
of Hosein's death, to excite
charity by a show of piety,
446. Way of eating, 496.
Peruvian Custom of chewing
the Coca leaves, 530.
PETERS, HUGH, said to have
been expelled from Jesus
College, Cambridge, and to
have acted in Shakespere's
Company, 150.

Petrary, two knights set in,
and hoisted over the castle,
366.
PHARAOH'S Bath, Arab stores
of, 443.
PHARONNIDA, W. CHAMBER-
LAYNE'S, referred to as illus-
trating the want of disci-
pline in Charles I.'s army,
148. Quoted, 324, 325.
Phengites, transparent, in the
monastery of St. Luke of
Stiris, 476.
Philippine Islanders, supersti-
tion of, 606.

Phoca Vitulina, uses of, by the
Aleutian Islanders, 560.
Pictures, Popish, curious mis-
take about, 152.

PIETRO DELLA VALLE, often
quoted, e g. 425, 440. Death
of his wife, 631.
Pigeons, the carrier ones of
Bagdad, 447.

Pigs in Italy, destroyers of
the Locust larvæ, 655.
Pilgrims, privileges of, 58.
Pimento and Mint, Turkish
drink of, 647.
Pinto-Tree, 666.
Pirates, passage to Ireland in-
fested by, in Strafford's time,

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Pomegranate seeds, dried by
the Persians to flavour ra-
gouts with, 598.
Pomp, considerations on reli-
gious, 69.

Poor, question about the sup-
port of, Bp. Sanderson's
views, 91.

Popery, Charles I.'s aversion
to, especially after he had
viewed the practice of it in
Spain, 141.
Pope's Supremacy, 17, 29.
Temporal over Spain denied
by the Spanish clergy, 278.
Porcupine, very destructive in
gardens, 648.
Porrage or porridge, and pot-
tage, derivation of, 647.
Portugal, change of military
terms in, 358. Religious
darkness of, 639. Mean con-
duct of the Court of, 285.
Portugucze Language, 257.
Postal Directions in 1549, 295.
Potato-Pie, 301.

Pottery, skill of the Hottentots
in, 634.

Poultry, greater use of, in for-
mer days, 354.
POYER, COLONEL, account of,

161.

Prayer, remarkable answer to,
37. Praying and saying
Prayers, the difference be-
tween, 89. Extempore, 105.
Fervency of, 126. Ostenta-
tious, 285. Holy Prayer,

417.

Preacher, how to distinguish a
true from a false, 48. Po-
pular, 109. JAMES II.'s di-
rections to, 124.
Preaching, Puritanical, South's
remarks upon, 39. Lengthy,
and Love-feast, 41. Mili-
tary, 62. Sober, 81. Plain,
102. Women's, Johnson's
remark upon, 126.

INDEX.

Preciosa, A, by SOR MARIA DE
CEO, 250.
Predestinarian Doctrine, effects
of, 46.

Pre-eminence, love of, 24.
'Prentices, London, the insub-
ordination of, 322.

Press, liberty of, in revolution-
ized France! 652.
Preux Chevaliers and Knights
Mamelot, their distinction,
366.

Pride, spiritual, not confined
to the rich, 53.
Princes of the nations in Hea-

ven, 120. Good, produce
good subjects, 339.
Principles, false, 118.
Produce of the Earth influenced
by man's sins, 96.
Prognosticators of Elizabeth's
days, enactment against,
637.

Provencal Poetry, poverty of,

248.

Prudence, religious, 63.
PRYNNE, account of, 175. His
own penitence, ib. His ears
grew again after they were
cut off and sewed on, ib.
Psophia crepitans, 605.
Pudding, favourite dish of our
forefathers, 298.
Puff-ball, powder of, stops
bleeding, 598.
Pulpit, antics in, 14.

Pullets, or, ST. EPPALETS, 53.
Pumpkin Pies, had in New
England on Thanksgiving
Days, 614.

PURCHAS, quoted, 419, 421,
429, 432, 448.
Purchasing, rule worthy to be
forhent in, 339.
Purgatory, doctrine of, 99,

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Quaker's Grass, a name in ex-
istence before the sect, 123.
Quash, Russian drink, made
by pouring hot water upon
rye bread, and leaving it to
ferment, 596.

Quern, use of, in California,
563.

QUINTANA, 265, 274, 283, 289.
QUINTIN, CRAUFURD'S Sketch-
es, &c. the dolé and tamtam,
508. Oriental war instru-
ments, 510. Women's dress,
ib. Oriental dress, 511. The
Jamu, ib. Account of the
dress of the Khatries, 512.

R.

Rabbit Warrens, established
formerly near the metropo
lis for the value of the fur,
335.

Rain sulphureous, like ink, 602.
Rainbow, caused by falling
waters, 535.

Raisins of Persia, 514.
RAMIRO, K. and ORTIGA, story
of, 360.

Ramists, the, formed a party
as late as James I.'s time,
333.

Rashid, fertility of the country
about, 502.

Rationalists, new sect of, in
Charles I.'s time, - Their
doctrine, 190-1.

Rats, plague of, between Mut-
tra and Delhi, 588.
Rattle-Snake, charmed by mu-
sic, 604. Soup made of, 649.
"Rebuke them sharply," 4.
Recluse, summary mode of
making one, 108.
Recreation, lawfulness of, 3.
Red-Hall, at Leeds, why so
called, 162.

Rein Deer Moss, 579, 612.
Rein Deer, destruction of their
fawns by the ŒEstrus Rangi-
ferinus, 529.
Reformation, the, 52.

Com-
pared, in some parts, with
the French Revolution, 364.
Relic, marvellous present of,
110. Of the archangel Ga-
briel, 381.
Religions, divers, the spawn of

faction, 104.

Quails, mentioned as a dainty Religious Improvement, 1. In-

by Wither, 304.

tolerance, 7. Falling off, 8.

Respuestas, Lus, 400, extracts
from, 285, 288, 291.
Rhe, Island of, unfortunate
descent upon, 178.
Rheumatism, infants about
Pittsburg in Pennsylvania
subject to, 596.
RIBEYRO, BERNARDINO, 214.
Rice and Cotton Fields in the
East, 427, 430. In the Ce-
lebes, 442. The rice of Na-
vapoura, its excellence, 497.
Planting of, 516.
RICHEOME, Plainte Apologe-
tique, 372.
RICHELIEU, his saying con-
cerning Strafford, that "the
English nation were so fool-
ish that they would not let
the wisest head among them
stand upon its own shoul-
ders," 164. Prime com.
missioner on the treaty of
marriage, 177. Employs
French Capuchins in Scot-
land, 187. His notion of be-
coming Patriarch of France,
195.

Ring and Sarazen, what? 638.
Rings, antiquity and use of,

356.

Rivers, encroachment of, in the

East, 422.

Robin Hood's Day, 299. His

bottle purchased, 436.
Robin, the poem of Robin Con-
science, or Conscionable Ro-
bin, 619.

Robin Redbreast, the talking,

642.

RODERICK, derivation of the
name, 261.
ROGER, H. in Picart, the age
at which a child is reckoned
to be a Brahmin, 471. Vi-
cramaarea, account of, 471,

472.

Roland and Oliver, figures of,
according to Canciani, at
Verona, 353.
Romaic-origin of the modern
term, 613.
ROMAN CATHOLICS, Protestant

work not to be relied upon
when edited by, 16. Romish
trumpery, 56. Frauds of,
58, 60. Statesmen's atten-
tion called to the cunning of
the Roman court, 88. Priests
impudently imprudent, 148.
Flatter Cromwell, 154.

INDEX.

When they raised contribu-
tions for Charles, 1639, the
Pope ordered them to de-
sist, 205.
Romance, carelessness of the
composers of, 347.
Ronas, the Indian grape, so
celebrated for its dye, 480.
RONSARD, Venus in her lament
for Adonis, 635.
ROQUE, DE LA, Les Puits de

Salomon, 478. Ancient ha-
bitation of Libanus, 479.
Rosary, borrowed by St. Do-
mingo from the Moslem,
399.

Rose-leares, a substitute for
tea, 598.

Rose, Romaunt of, extracts
from, 315.

Rose Lake, supposed suction
in, 593.

Rosline Castle, superstition re-
specting, 357.

Rotten-wood, advantage of, to
fatting swine, 596.

687

Sailors' swearing and praying
just the same, 125.
Saint, appropriation of the title
of, 119.

SALAS, JUAN YAGUE de, Los
Amantes de Teruel, 254-256,
287, 293.
SALAZAR, FRANCISCO DE, on
the exercises of the Jesuits,
376. Good consideration
that "all creatures except
man fulfil the end of their
creation," ib.
SALLINAS, all description and
no ornament, 210. Epitaph
on Fr. Manoel, ib.
Salsette, Bees in the caverns
of, 418.

Salt Provisions, quicker lose
their saltness by soaking in
salt water than in fresh, 596.
Sam, the juice of, and its
effects, 505.

Samaritan Fable, 653.
Samson Agonistes, quoted, 640.
Sanctuary, question of, 90.

Royal Buckler, quoted, 323, Sand-filter, 600.

324.

Ruby of Paradise, 439.
RUDYARD, SIR BENJAMIN, his
remark on the quarrel be-
tween preaching and prayer,
146. Indemnified with lands,
148. Remark on religion,

205.

Rump, the burning of, 323.
Rural Deans, great use of, 68.
Rushlights, the antiquity of,
illustrated from W. Harris's
tr. of Ware's Antiq. of Ire-
land, 351.
RUSHWORTH, quoted, 130, &c.
146, &c. Bracewell be-
queathed to, but it did not
prosper in his hands, 206.
Died of dram drinking in a
gaol, ib.

S.

Sack, a cure for foot soreness,
instanced in the case of Ni-
cholas Ferrar, in walking
through Spain, 646.
SACONTALA, quoted, 470. Bri-
dal array, 476.

Saffron, Irish custom of co-
louring linen with, to save
charges of washing, 365.
Sagamores, or Indian kings,
660. The Sagamore and his
notch cane, 667.

Sand, White, sprinkled on
stacks, a preventative against
mice, 597.
SANDERSON, BISHOP, his in-
most thoughts, 1. His aug-
mentation of small vicarages,
.9. Averse to extempore
sermons, 31. His Visita-
tion and Assize sermons, 37.
On the support of the poor,

91.

His assertion that the
extremes of Popery and
Presbyterianism meet, 195.
Sannyasi, the, their austere life
according to the Institutes
of Menu, 493.
Santiago del Estero, or, Maho-
met's paradise, 575.

Sarama Pereimal, end of, 425.
Sarazen and Ring, sport of,
638.

Sartrina, the, in religious
houses, i.e. the tailor's office,
369.

Satan, delusions of, 20. Stra
tagems of, 46.
SAUNDERS, DR., Cranmer's
enemy, 53.

Sayo, the, or, Coat of Cotton,
defence against Indian ar
rows, 644.

Scenery, description of, 618.
Schools, Public, question of,

35.

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