■ B i THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF FREDERIC THOMAS BLANCHARD r ?-\rtA**M4** , ( ^ 0&" A CONCORDANCE TO THE ENGLISH POEMS OF THOMAS GRAY EDITED BY ALBERT S. COOK PRESIDENT OF THE CONCORDANCE SOCIETY m BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY €()e Etocwtoe fjress Cambridge 1908 COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY ALBERT S. COOK ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Published November rqo8 PR n TO GEORGE HERBERT PALMER AT WHOSE SUGGESTION THE CONCORDANCE SOCIETY WAS BEGUN I PREFACE This Concordance is the first to appear under the auspices of The Con- cordance Society, which was organized at Yale University in the Christmas vacation of 1906. The choice of an author was dictated by these considera- tions: his historical importance; the public interest in him; and the moder- ate compass of his works, so that the compilation might be effected by few hands in a brief time, and the subvention required by the publishers might not unduly tax the slender resources of the Society. The making of the ex- cerpts was begun, and virtually concluded, in the Christmas vacation of 1907; the quotations, most of which had been alphabetized within the smaller groups by the compilers, were then fully alphabetized by the editor, and the head-words normalized, where it appeared necessary. The next step was to secure a publisher, and to arrange for the details of publication. The copy was forwarded to the publishers in April of the present year. The readers who excerpted the material were as follows : — Dr. Charles G. Osgood, Preceptor in English, Princeton University, Secretary of The Concordance Society. Dr. Elbert N. S. Thompson, Instructor in Rhetoric, Yale University. Mr. Frederic T. Blanchard, Assistant in Rhetoric, Yale University. Mr. Alfred A. May, University Fellow in English, Yale University. Miss Ernestine L. Miller, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania. The Editor. As none of the readers had had any experience in concordance work, the speed and accuracy displayed were most gratifying. Those who have participated in the reading of the galley-proofs are the following: — Professor Curtis H. Page, Columbia University, Treasurer of The Con- cordance Society. Professor Charles W. Hodell, Woman's College, Baltimore, Member of the Executive Committee of The Concordance Society. Professor Lane Cooper, Cornell University. Professor Chauncey B. Tinker, Yale University. Professor Arthur Adams, Trinity College, Hartford. Dr. Elbert N. S. Thompson, as above. Mr. Alfred A. May, as above. Miss Mary W. Smyth, Graduate Student in English, Yale University. The Editor. VI PREFACE None of the galley-proofs were given out to the readers before June 15, and with one exception all were returned before July 1 ; what this means in the closing days of a busy academic year, in our climate, no American teacher, at least, will need to be told. The basis of the Concordance is Gosse's edition of Gray (4 vols., London and New York, 1884): the poetry is contained in Vol. I, but a few variants have been culled from the letters in Vols. II and III. Quotations from the poems which Gosse characterizes as doubtful have been distinguished from the rest by a prefixed dagger. Gosse's order of poems has been followed, except that variants have been placed under the poems to which they belong; this applies also to the List of Poems on pp. ix, x. The question of normalization was a somewhat difficult one. The ortho- graphy of Gray's editions and manuscripts is so capricious and inconsistent that it seemed impracticable to conform the head-words to it in all cases. Should one make the head-word Riseing, for example, as Gray twice spells it ? or Redning {Sonnet on the Death of Richard West, line 2) ? Should one write Chearful {Elegy 87), or Cheerful {Alliance of Education and Government 66) ? Horror {Fatal Sisters 49), or Horrour {Progress of Poesy 93) ? Rhymes {Stanzas to Mr. Richard Bentley 9), or Rhimes {Elegy 79) ? In such doubt- ful cases as these, some choice must be made, and consistency required that similar words should be similarly treated. Thus, one could hardly normal- ize to Horror, and write Warriour as the head-word (of course the spelling of the quotations is kept). Often such a choice will be, or seem, arbitrary; I have given the preference to full forms {Roused, not Rous'd), and to forms generally preferred by scholars, for etymological or other reasons, in America : thus Rime (not Rhime or Rhyme), and endings in -or, not -our, like Gray's Rumor (thus Ardor, Armor, Colors, Flavor, Honor, Horror, Labor, Manor, Parlor, Rigor, Tenor, Vigor, Warrior; Honorable, Neighboring, etc.). Words hyphenated by Gray are so kept, and the second element of such words is entered in its alphabetical place, with a cross-reference to the complete word. In general, cross-references have been freely employed — too freely, some will think — but it seemed desirable to enable every inquirer to find with* ease what he sought. The following words, forty-seven in number, have been omitted, follow- ing the precedent of Strong's Concordance to the Bible : a, an, and, are, as, be, but, by, for, from, he, her, him, his, I, in, is, it, me, my, not, 0, of, our, out, shall, shalt, she, that, the, thee, their, them, they, thou, thy, to, unto, up, upon, us, was, we, were, with, ye, you ; but contracted or quasi-contracted forms of these words, such as are found in dont and 'em, are given. These omis- sions, again, may seem rather arbitrary, and so indeed they are; but so PREFACE vii perhaps would any omissions be, in the light of some needs or expecta- tions. As to punctuation, quotation-marks have been omitted when only the quotation has been given; otherwise they have been retained. The same prin- ciple has been observed with respect to parentheses. Gray's punctuation, like his capitalization, is frequently erratic, but both have been retained. In the excerpts, it has been difficult in many cases to decide whether to give the immediate context of a word, without particular regard to the construction and sense, or to seek a subject or verb, perchance, in another line. We have inclined toward the latter, but our practice has not been strictly uniform, and perhaps could not be. Suggestions to collaborators will be interpreted with more latitude by one than by another, and when the mate- rial has once been collected, an attempt on the part of the editor to secure greater uniformity would involve considerable labor in looking up refer- ences, and passing judgment upon each doubtful case. Such are the disad- vantages of collaboration in the making of a concordance, but perhaps an ideal uniformity in this respect would hardly be worth the effort it would cost. Occasionally homonyms, when different parts of speech, have been sepa- rated: see, for example, under Art. This has been done only in cases which the editor thought extreme for one reason or another; perhaps it would have been better to distinguish all homonyms, but little practical inconvenience is likely to result where the quotations are so few under each word as here. The courtesy and consideration shown by Houghton Mifflin Company in the negotiations looking to the publication of this volume have been most gratifying, and augur well for the success of The Concordance Society in a very important respect. This preface may fitly end with a quotation from an anonymous writer in a recent number of Book News: " No poet can be fully mastered without either dictionary or concordance. You have no grasp on a poet's use of words without one aid or the other." Albert S. Cook. Greensboro, Vermont, Aug. 10, 1908. LIST OF POEMS 3- 4- 5- 6. [6 A . 6 B . 6 C . 7- 8. 9- 10. [io A . io s . I0 C . I0 D . II. 12. 14- 15- 16. 17- 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23- 24. IN THE ORDER OF GOSSE'S EDITION (save for titles in square brackets) [II and III refer to Vols. II and III] Ode on the Spring (p. 3) Spring. Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat, drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes (p. 9) Cat. Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College (p. 15) Eton. Hymn to Adversity (p. 23) Adv. The Progress of Poesy (p. 27) P. P. The Bard (p. 39) Bard. Letter to Thomas Wharton, August 21, 1755 (II. 266) Bard Lett. 1 Letter to William Mason, May, 1757 (II. 311) Bard Lett. 2 Letter to William Mason, June, 1757 (II. 314)] Bard Lett. 3 The Fatal Sisters (p. 51) F. S. The Descent of Odin (p. 59) Odin. The Triumphs of Owen (p. 67) Owen. Elegy written in a Country Church-Yard (p. 71) El. The First Edition of the Elegy in a Country Church-Yard (p. 215) El. Dods. The Pembroke Text of the Elegy (p. 225) El. Pern. Readings of the Egerton MS. of the Elegy (p. 71) El. Eg. Readings of the Mason MS. of the Elegy (p. 71)] El. Mas. A Long Story (p. 81) L. S. The Installation Ode (p. 91) Inst. Agrippina (p. 10 1) Agr. Sonnet on the Death of Richard West (p. no) West. Hymn to Ignorance (p. m) Ign. The Alliance of Education and Government (p. 113) E. G. Stanzas to Mr. Richard Bentley (p. 121) Bent. Ode on the Pleasure arising from Vicissitude (p. 123) Vic. Epitaph on Mrs. Jane Clerke (p. 125) Clerke. Epitaph on a Child (p. 126) Child. Sketch of his own Character (p. 127) Char. Epitaph on Sir William Williams (p. 128) Williams. The Death of Hoel (p. 129) Hoel. Caradoc (p. 130) Caradoc. LIST OF POEMS 25- 26. 27. [27A. 28. 29. 30. 3i. 32. 33- 34- 35- 36. 37- 38. 39- 40. 41. 42. 43- 44- 45- 46. 47- 48. Conan (p. 130) Conan. Jemmy Twitcher: or, The Cambridge Courtship (p. 131) C. C. Shakespeare Verses (p. 132) Shak. Letter to William Mason, July 16, 1765 (III. 205)] Shak. Lett. 4 Satire upon the Heads : or, Never a Barrel the better Her- ring (p. 134) Satire. Impromptu, suggested by a View, in 1766, of the Seat and Ruins of a deceased Nobleman, at Kingsgate, Kent (p. 135) View. Amatory Lines (p. 137) Am. Lines. Song (p. 138) Song. Comic Lines (p. 138) Com. Lines. Couplet about Birds (p. 139) Birds. Tophet (p. 139) Toph. Parody on an Epitaph (p. 140) Par. on Ep. Impromptu by Mr. Gray going out of Raby Castle (p. 140) Impr. Vane. Extempore by Mr. Gray on Dr. Keene, Bishop of Chester (p. 140) Epitaph on Bishop Keene (p. 141) Epitaph on Mrs. Keene (p. 141) A Couplet by Mr. Gray (p. 141) Stanza (p. 141) Statius. Thebaidos VI. 646-668 (p. 145) Statius. Thebaidos VI. 704-724 (p. 147) Tasso. Gerus. Lib. Cant. XIV. St. 32 (p. 148) Imitated from Propertius, Lib. III. Eleg. 5, v. 1, 2 (p. 151) Propertius, Lib. III. Eleg. 5, v. 19 (p. 151) Propertius, Lib. II. Eleg. 1 (p. 153) Dante. Canto 33, dell' Inferno (p. 157) Ext. Keene. Ep. Keene. Mrs. Keene. Couplet. Stanza. Stat. 1 Stat. 2 Tasso. Prop. 1 Prop. 2 Prop. 3 Dante. DOUBTFUL POEMS 49. Ode (p. 205) 50. Poetical Rondeau (p. 208) 51. The Characters of the Christ-Cross-Row (p. 210) Ode. Rond. Ch. Cr. ABBREVIATIONS [The references in parenthesis are to the prefixed numbers in the List of Poems preceding. The references to pages are to Vol. I of Gosse's edition, except as otherwise designated.] PAGE PAGE Adv. (4) 23 Hoel (23) 129 Agr. (13) IOI Ign- (*5) III Am.tLines (30) 137 Impr. Vane (36) 140 Bard (6) 39 Inst. (12) 91 Bard Lett. 1 (6a) II. 266 L. S. (11) 8l Bard Lett. 2 (6b) II. 31 1 Mrs. Keene (39) 141 Bard Lett. 3 (6c) II. 314 Ode (49) 205 Bent. (17) 121 Odin (8) 59 BiV* (33) 139 Owen (9) 67 Caradoc (24) 130 Par. on Ep. (35) 140 Car (2) 9 P. P. (5) 27 C. C. (26) 131 Prop} (45) 151 CW. (21) 127 Prop. 2 (46) 151 CA. Cr. (51) 210 Prop." (47) 153 CAiW (20) 126 Rond. (50) 208 C/Vr&*> (19) 125 Satire (28) 134 Com. Lines (32) 138 Shak. (27) 132 Conan (25) 130 Shak. Lett. 4 (27A) III. 205 Couplet (40) 141 Song (31) 138 Dan?* (48) 157 Spring (1) 3 £. G. (16) "3 Stanza (41) 141 £/. (10) 7i Stat. 1 (42) 145 El. Dods. (ioa) 215 Stat. 2 (43) 147 £/. Pem. (iob) 225 Taj-jo (44) 148 El. Eg. (10c) 7i Toph. (34) 139 £/. Mas. (iod) 7i FiV. (18) 123 Ep. Keene (38) 141 J'rVw (29) 135 Eton (3) l 5 West (14) IIO .Ex?. Z^n? (37) 140 Williams (22) 128 F. S. (7) reviations 5i The following abb designate variants under the poems in question: — Dods. Dodsley's edition. MS. Any MS. variants where only one manuscript is quoted under the text. Nich. Nicholls. Pem. Pembroke MS. Wal. Wal pole MS. Whar. Wharton MS. A CONCORDANCE TO THE ENGLISH POEMS OF THOMAS GRAY A, omitted. Abandoned. Old, and abandon'd by each venal friend, View i. Abode. To chear the shiv'ring Natives dull abode. P. P. 57. That leads to Hela's drear abode. din 4. draw his frailties from their dread abode, El. 126. The rough abode of want and liberty, E. G. 97. road That to the grotto leads, my dark abode. Tasso 38. About. What a pother is here about wenching and roaring! C.C. 23. — for he talks about God — C. C. 30. I grop'd About among their cold Remains Dante 78. Above. but far above the Great. P. P. 123. Above, below, the rose of snow, ... we spread: Bard 91. While spirits blest above . . . Join Inst. 87. Abyss. The secrets of th' Abyss to spy. P. P. 97. Acarnania. A third arose, of Acarnania he, Stat. 1 11. Accent. fK, as a man, with hoarser accent speaks, Ch. Cr. 47. Accents. Methinks I hear in accents low Spring 41. in accents [murmurs, MS.] dread, Odin 23. In still small Accents whisp'ring El. Mas. 83. Accept. In lieu of penitence, . . . Accept my vengeance. Agr. 180. Accepts. She half accepts, and half rejects, my Fires, Prop} 22. Acclamations. By acclamations roused, came tow'ring on. Stat. 1 14. Accord. And thus they speak in soft accord Inst. 55. Accursed. bending o'er th' accursed loom Bard 95. Achaians. two youths advance, Achaians born, Stat. 1 10. Aches. My thought aches at him; Agr. 160. Achievements. Each pannel in achievements cloathing, L. S. 6. Aching. Visions of glory, spare my aching sight, Bard 107. The Widow feels thee in her aching hip; Com. Lines 5. Aconite. they love not aconite. Agr. 21. Acres. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop. 7 43. Across. Her artful hand across the sounding Strings. Prop? 16. Act. fthrow . . . half an act into the Fire: Ode 34. Adamantine. Bound in thy adamantine chain, Adv. 5. Add. What if you add, how she turn'd pale Agr. 9. Admire. let the Muse admire, Bent. 2. The band around admire the mighty mass, Stat 1 7. Admired. his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 36. Admitted. That grim and antique Tower admitted Dante 23. Adoration. A stranger To adoration, Agr. 34. Adore. Prostrate with filial reverence I adore. Ign. 10. Adores. Where grateful science still adores Eton 3. Adorn. The verse adorn again Fierce War, Bar d 125. Adorned. each Grace adorn'd his frame, Williams 3. Adown. Swift shoots the Village-maid . . . adown the shining way, Tasso 20. Adrastus. Then thus the King: — Adrastus. Stat. 1 I. Advance Agony Advance. the bull, . . . On surrounding foes advance ? Caradoc 3. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Stat. 1 9. Advanced. the sun is high advanc'd, Agr. 158. Adventurers. Some bold adventurers disdain Eton 35. Adventurous. If with adventrous oar and ready sail E. G. 104. Adverse. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. Advise. it rekes not That I advise thee. Dante 18. ^Edileship. See Edileship. .ffigis. Thy leaden aegis 'gainst our ancient foes ? Ign. 14. .3£monian. Th' jEmonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, Stat. 1 58. JEolian. Awake, ^Eolian lyre, awake, P. P. 1. Aeron. But none . . . return, Save Aeron brave, Hoel 21. Etna's. from ^Etna's smoking summit broke, Stat? 18. Afar. Till down the eastern cliffs afar P. P. 52. Till fierce Hyperion from afar P. P. MS. 52. the Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 1 5. Oft o'er the trembling Nations from afar E. G. 46. Affability. Commend me to her affability! L. S. 139. Affection. Affection warm, and faith sincere, Clerke 5. Affinity. The Master of Trinity To him bears affinity; Satire 12. Afflict. The Bad affright, afflict the Best! Adv. 4. Afflicts. Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite, Odin 29. Afford. no eye, afford A tear Bard 65. Affright. The Bad affright, afflict the Best! Adv. 4. Severn shall re-eccho with affright Bard 54. With headlong rage and wild affright Hoel 2. Affrighted. far aloof th' affrighted ravens sail; Bardyj. Affrights. With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, Stat? 29. Afield. How jocund did they drive their team afield ! El. 27. After. •f-Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ck. Cr. 9. Again. with looks intent Again . . . she stretch'd, Cat 26. again she bent, Cat 26. they vow their truth, and are again believed. Adv. 24. The verse adorn again Fierce War, Bard 125. Ne'er again his likeness see; F. S. 46. Let me, let me sleep again. Odin 34. Once again my call obey, Odin 51 ; MS. 59. Once again arise, and say, Odin 60. Enquirer come To break my iron-sleep again; Odin 89. Again the buried Genius of old Rome. Agr. 141. Oh take me to thy peaceful shade again. Ign. 6. And breathe and walk again: Vic. 48. A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child a,. and send again to War; Prop. 3 82. j-Till again the rolling Sun Bursts Ode 43. ■j-Late to find it: — and, again, Rond. 3, 11, 19, 27, 35. •j-but soon pops in again; Ch. Cr. 30. Against. See also 'Gainst. Right against the eastern gate, Odin 17. Squadrons three against him came; Owen 10. And all that Groom could urge against him. L.S. 116. Against thee, liberty and Agrippina: Agr. 152. With double light it beam'd against the day: Stat. 1 27. Against the stream the waves secure he trod, Tasso 15. Aganippe. Where Aganippe warbles as it flows; Prop. 2 4. Age. Chill'd by age, their . . . dance They leave, Spring 39. And slow-consuming Age. Eton 90. to shine Thro' every unborn age, Inst. 17. The slacken'd sinews of time-wearied age. Agr. 139. Oh! sacred age! Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. But not to one in this benighted age Bent. 17. Age step 'twixt love and me, Prop. 2 12. Be love my youth's pursuit, and science crown my Age. Prop. 2 52. Aged. Grav'd on the stone beneath yon aged thorn. El. 116. Ages. unborn Ages, crowd not on my soul! Bard 108. And bring the buried ages back to view. Ign. 35. Thro' Ages by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. Aghast. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. Agonizing. Shrieks of an agonizing King! Bard 56. Agony. There . . . Agony, that pants for breath, Owen 39. Agrippina In agony, in death resign'd, Clerke 7. Her latest agony of mind Clerke MS. 10. Agrippina. Against thee, liberty and Agrippina: Agr. 152. Agrippina 's. the blood Of Agrippina's race, Agr. 38. Ague. A sudden fit of ague shook him, L. S. 119. Ah. Ah, happy hills, ah, pleasing shade, Eton II. Ah, fields belov'd in vain, Eton 12. Ah, shew them where in ambush stand Eton 58. • Ah, tell them, they are men! Eton 60. ah! why should they know their fate? Eton 95. But ah! *t is heard no more — P. P.m. Ah, ignorance! Ign. 9. Ah! could they catch his strength, Bent. 13. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams II. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, View 17. Ah! say, Fellow-swains, Am. Lines 7. Ah! what means yon violet flower! SongT,. Ah! let her ever my Desires control, Prop? 76. Aid. Some speedy aid to send. Cat 33. Join the wayward work to aid: F. S. 19. And beg'd his aid that dreadful day. L. S. 92. That Slumber brings to aid my Poetry. Prop? 20. Aim. Taught his . . . hand To aim the forked bolt; Agr. 11. Aimed. 'Twas there he aim'd the meditated harm, Sta:? 22. Air. hark, how thro* the peopled air Spring 23. arms sublime, that float upon the air, P. P. 38. Thro' the azure deep of air: P. P. 117. They mock the air with idle state. Bard 4. Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air Bard 20. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, Bard 119. Iron-sleet . . . Hurtles in the darken 'd air. F. S. 4. snowy veils, that float in air. Odin 78. And all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. 6. And waste its sweetness on the desert air. El. 56. To celebrate her eyes, her air — L. S. 33. Her air and all her manners shew it. L. S. 138. these walls alone And the mute air Agr. 23. Melts into air and liquid light. Vic. 16. Mute was the musick of the air, Vic. 23. The common Sun, the air, the skies, Vic. 51. such a pick-pocket air! C. C. 6. song-thrush . . . Scatters his loose notes in the waste of air. Birds 2. Nor changing Skies can hurt, nor sultry Air. Prop? 94. Airs. Parent of sweet and solemn-breathing airs, P. P. 14. So draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. All Airy. their airy dance They leave, Spring 39. in fancy's airy colouring wrought Bent. 7. Aisle. See He, Isle. Aix. At Aix, his voluntary sword he drew, Williams 5. Ajar. But that they left the door a-jarr, L. S. 74. Alas. Alas, regardless of their doom Eton 51. Alas, who would not wish to please her! L. S. 36. These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, Wat 5. alas, my fears! Can powers immortal Ign. 25. Or if, alas! it be my Fate Prop? 69. Albion. They sought, oh Albion! nest thy sea-encircled coast. P. P. 82. Alecto's. the hissing terrors round Alecto's head, Prop? 42. Alexandria's. And scepter'd Alexandria's captive Shore, Alifce. P '° P ' 4S - Alike the Busy and the Gay Spring 35. Condemn'd alike to groan, Eton 92. Alike they scorn the pomp of tyrant-Power, P. P. 79. Awaits alike th' inevitable hour. El. 35. There they alike in trembling hope repose, El. 127. Alike to all the Kind impartial Heav'n E. G. 28. All. Not all that tempts your wand'ring eyes Cat 40. Nor all, that glisters, gold. Cat 42. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. To each his suff'rings: all are men, Eton 91. give to rapture all thy trembling strings. P. P. 2. Night, and all her sickly dews, P. P. 49. All hail, ye genuine Kings, Bard no. Horror covers all the heath, F. S. 49. Nor on all profusely pours; Owen 6. And all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. 6. all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, El. 34. all he had, a tear, El. 123. He gain'd . . . ('t was all he wish'd) a friend. El. 124. By this time all the Parish know it L. S. 42. She curtsies, ... To all the People of condition. L.S. 112. And all that Groom could urge against him. L.S. 116. Her air and all her manners shew it. L. S. 138. All that on Granta's fruitful plain . . . bounty pour'd, Inst. 51. All shall be confess'd, Agr. 166. The Fields to all their wonted Tribute bear; West 11. And all was ignorance, and all was night. Ign. 30. Alike to all the Kind impartial Heav'n E. G. 28. could not save His all Clerke MS. 12. And I, the meanest of them all, HocIzt,. Allay Amazon And all the town rings of his swearing and roaring! C.C.i 6. But what awaits me now is worst of all. Shak. 8. and all his [he, Lett. 4 ] scribbles, tear. Shak. 16. The Master of King's Copies them in all things; Satire 1 8. The Master of Catherine Takes them all for his pattern; Satire 20. The Master of Clare Hits them all to a hair; Satire 22. The Master of Peter's Has all the same features; Satire 32. As to Trinity Hall We say nothing at all. Satire 36. And mimic desolation covers all. View 16. All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, Stat. 1 24. Phlegyas . . . call'd forth all the man. Stat. 1 33. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat. 1 34. Collecting all his force, the circle sped; Stat. 1 48. Brac'd all his nerves, and every sinew strung; Stat. 2 7. the orb . . . Far overleaps all bound, Stat. 2 12. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. a River ... all further course withstood; Tasso 8. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop. 2 14. When Pindus' self . . . Shakes all his Pines, Prop. 2 32. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop. 2 45. And all the scenes, that hurt the grave's repose, Prop. 2 49. From Cynthia all that in my numbers shines; Prop. 2 3. To Cynthia all my Wishes I confine; Prop. 3 68. A little Verse my All that shall remain; Prop. 2 101. Of all our Youth the Ambition and the Praise! Prop. 3 104. To thee and all unknown Dante 19. nor wept, for all Within was Stone: Dante 53. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. straight Ariseing all they cried, Dante 65. fOr Poppy-thoughts blast all the shoots. Ode 12. f Buzzing with all their parent Faults; Ode 46. f Elizabeths all dwindled into Betties; Ch. Cr. 12. •jThey 're all diverted into H and B. Ch. Cr. 14. f All with fantastic clews, fantastic clothes, Ch. Cr. 17. "fall, all, but Grannam Osborne's Gazetteer. Ch. Cr. 20. ■|-See Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch.Cr. 28. f Proteus-like all tricks, all shapes can shew, Ch. Cr. 43. +SIow follow all the quality of State, Ch. Cr. 51. jAnd brings all Womankind before your view; Ch. Cr. C9. Allay. May the long Thirst of Tantalus allay, Prop 3 89. Allotted. Few were the days allotted to his breath; Child 5. Aloft. Now the golden Morn aloft Waves Vic. 1. Alone. purple Tyrants, . . . unpitied and alone. Adv. 8. Nor circumscrib'd alone Their growing virtues, El. 65. Alone, unguarded and without a lictor, Agr. 5. much I hope these walls alone Agr. 22. Let me not fall alone; Agr. 186. 'T is man alone that Joy descries Vic. 27. Alone in nature's wealth array'd, Hoel 9. Along. Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 9. the rich stream of music winds along P. P. 7. Shafts . . . Shoot the trembling cords along. F. S. 14. Black and huge along they sweep, Owen 17. Along the cool sequester 'd vale of life El. 75. Along the heath, El. no. The Greenwood Side along, El. Mas. 117. along some winding entry L. S. 102. while Bentley leads her sister-art along, Bent. 3. while yet he strays Along the . . . vale Clerke 12. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. fQ draws her train along the Drawing-room, Ch. Cr. 50. Aloof. far aloof th' affrighted ravens sail; Bard 37. And scornful flung th' unheeded weight Aloof; Stat. 1 22. Aloud. Triumphant tell aloud, Bar d MS. no. she cries aloud Inst. 67. Alpheus'. oft on Alpheus' shore Stat. 1 36. Already. the ghostly Prudes . . . Already had condemn'd the sinner. L. S. 130. already 'gan the Dawn To send: Dante 25. Altars. round heav'n's altars shed The fragrance Inst. 73. Altered. hard Unkindness' alter'd eye, Eton 76. The times are alter'd quite and clean! L. S. 136. Always. and skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song 10. Am. See I 'm. Amain. Now rowling down the steep amain, P. P. 10. And Sigismundo, and Gualandi rode Amain, Dante 34. Amazement. Amazement in his van, Bard 61. Amazon. The other Amazon kind Heaven Had arm'd L. S. 29. Amber Answered Amber. Or -where Maeander's amber waves P. P. 69. Ambient. That rise and glitter o'er the ambient tide E. G. 107. Ambition. Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Eton 71. Let not Ambition mock their useful toil, El. 29. If bright ambition from her craggy seat Agr. 51 . Of all our Youth the Ambition and the Praise! Prop? 104. Ambition's, je manes of ambition's victims, Agr. 174. Ambitious. ambitious of the power To judge Agr. 40. Ambush. shew them where in ambush stand Eton 58. Amid. laughing . . . Amid severest woe. Eton 80. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop? 47. Amidst. Ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bard 41. Among. whose flowers among Wanders the hoary Thames Eton 8. He rests among the Dead. Bard 68. fame Has spread among the crowd; Agr. 168. In silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Bent. 1. Rise the rapturous choir among; Vic. 18. among their cold remains Dante 78. Amorous. the rosy queen Of amorous thefts: Agr. 189. The Birds in vain their amorous Descant joyn; WestT, the long Iliad of the amorous Fight. Prop? 26 Ample. Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 114 Give ample room, and verge enough Bard 51 Soon their ample sway shall stretch F S. 39 Knowledge . . . her ample page . . . did ne'er ' unroll; El. 49 'T is ample Matter for a Lover's Book; Prop? 28 An, omitted. Ancient. Has reassum'd her ancient right; Odin 92. Molest her ancient solitary reign. El. 12 An ancient pile of buildings stands: L. S. 2. Thy leaden aegis 'gainst our ancient foes ? Ign. 14. Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat? 13. The torrent-stream his ancient bounds disdains, Tasso 9. Anciently. as somewhat rare That anciently appear'd, Agr. 136. And, omitted. Androgeon. And Phoebus' Son recall'd Androgeon Prop? 84. Anew. ■(■Then have left, to love anew: Ron d. 7. anew revived, with silver light Prop? XI. Angel. Two angel [beauteous, Wal., Dods.] forms were seen to glide, Cat 14. Angels. Where Angels tremble, while they gaze, P. P. 100. Anger. Disdainful Anger, pallid Fear, Eton 63. Angry. Burthens of the angry deep. Owen 18. All angry heaven inflicts, Prop? 45. Anguish. but to the voice of Anguish? P. P. 72. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. To weep without knowing the cause of my an- guish: Am. Lines 2. Anguish, that . . . wrings My inmost Heart ? Dante 5. either Hand I gnaw'd For Anguish, Dante 64. Animate. They breathe a soul to animate thy clay. Bard 122. Animated. Can storied urn or animated bust El. 41. This spacious animated Scene survey E. G. 22. In swifter measures animated run, Bent. 11. Animates. O'erpower the fire that animates our frame; E. G. 65. Anjou's. And Anjou's heroine, Inst. 43. Annals. The short and simple annals of the poor. El. 32. Anne. A moment's patience, gentle Mistress Anne: Shah 1. Annual. Thrice hath Hyperion roll'd his annual race, Ign. II. Anon. Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat? 51. Another. another Arthur reigns. Bard MS. no. Another came; nor yet beside the rill, El. 1 11. Another touch, another temper take, E. G. 79. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand,- Stat? 15. it be my Fate to try Another Love, Prop? 70. That Day, and yet another, mute we sate, Dante 70. Another's. The tender for another's pain, Eton 93. Anselmo. first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 55. Answer. Their answer was, If the son reign, Agr. 66. bids the pencil answer to the lyre. Bent. 4. Answered. yet wept I not, or answer'd Dante 57. Anthem 6 Arm Anthem. The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. El. 40. Antic. With antic Sports, and blue-eyed Pleasures, P. P. 30. Antiquated. Ye gothic fanes, and antiquated towers, Ign. 2. Antique. Ye distant spires, ye antique towers, Eton 1. Minds of the antique cast, Agr. 126. That grim and antique Tower admitted Dante 23. Antium. Say, she retir'd to Antium; Agr. 7. I will be gone, But not to Antium — Agr. 166. Anxious. This pleasing anxious being e'er resign'd, El. 86. Give anxious Cares and endless Wishes room; El. Mas. 86. Any. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. Ape. meaner Beauties . . . vainly ape her art L. S. 28. Apparatus. So cunning was the Apparatus, L. S. 85. Appear. Fair Venus' train appear, Spring 2. gorgeous Dames, and Statesmen old . . . appear. Bard 114. Before His high tribunal thou and I appear. Agr. 144. Here should Augustus great in Arms appear, Prop. 3 41. ■j-Part in a Chrysalis appear. Ode 42. +See Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. •jThe walls of old Jerusalem appear, Ch. Cr. 27. Appeared. as somewhat rare That anciently appear'd, Agr. 136. Appears. whenlo! appears The wondrous Sage: Tasso 11. And in the midst a spacious arch appears. Tasso 42. ■j-E enters next, and with her Eve appears, Ch. Cr. 5. Applause. She saw; and purr'd applause. Cat 12. Th' applause of list'ning senates to command, E/.61. the senate's joint applause, Agr. 77. Appleby. At Broom, Pendragon, Appleby and Brough. Par. on Ep. 3. Approach. That fly th' approach of morn. Eton 50. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach de- clare: P. P- 36- Approach and read ... the lay, El. 115. Approached. now the Hour Of timely Food approach'd; Dante 50. Approaching. Approaching Comfort view: Vic. 40. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop. 2 3 1 . April. Till April starts, and calls around Vic. 5. Aprons. With . . . aprons long they hid their armour, L. S. 38. Apt. For folks in fear are apt to pray L. S. 90. Arbitrary. pleasures That wait on . . . arbitrary sway: Agr. 79. Arch. And in the midst a spacious arch appears. Tasso 42. the vivid arch of Jove; Prop. 2 29. Arched. Things, that . . . Have arch'd the hearer's brow, Agr. 169. Arches. Turrets and arches nodding to their fall, View 14. Arching. See O'er-arching. Inst. 27. Ardent. With many an ardent wish, Cat 21. Ardor. How vain the ardour of the Crowd, Spring 18. First the genuine ardour stole. Inst. 22. •j-But, tho' Flowers his ardour raise, Ode 15. Ardour. See Ardor. Are, omitted. Argive. Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band, Stat. 1 16. Arguments. Disprov'd the arguments of Squib, L. S. 115. Arise. The portals nine of hell arise. Odin 16. Prophetess, arise, and say, Odin 52; MS. 74. Once again arise, and say, Odin 60. Goddess! awake, arise! Ign. 25. Here mouldering fanes and battlements arise, View 13. flf a plenteous Crop arise, Ode 7. Arising. straight Ariseing all they cried, Dante 65. Arm. Who . . . delight to cleave With pliant arm Eton 26 To arm the hand of childhood, Agr. 138 Let him stand forth his brawny arm to boast. Stat. 1 3 his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 36 Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Stat } 43 His vigorous arm he tried before he flung, Stat. 2 6 True to the mighty arm that gave it force, Stat. 2 II And scarce Ulysses 'scaped his giant arm. Stat. 2 23 Armed Assigned Armed. kind Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, L. S. 30. her that arm'd This painted Jove, Agr. 29. Armenia. That in Armenia quell the Parthian force Agr. III. Armor. With . . . aprons long they hid their armour, L. S. 38. Armor's. Their scaly armour's Tyrian hue Cat 16. Armour. See Armor. Armour's. See Armor's. Arms. arms sublime, that float upon the air, P. P. 38. Stretch'd forth his little arms, P. P. 88. "To arms! " cried Mortimer, Bard 14. their hundred arms they wave, Bard 25. In glitt'ring arms and glory drest, Owen 21. Their Arms, their Kings E. G. 49. Who trust your arms Stat. 1 17. Augustus great in Arms Prop? 41. fBattles, Sieges, Men, and Arms, Ode 25. Arose. A third arose, Stat. 1 11. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. Around. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. Hyperion hurls around his . . . shafts P.P.MS. 53. Inspiration breath'd around: P. P. 74. heap'd his master's feet around, Owen 29. the sacred Calm, that broods around, El. Mas. 81. many a holy text around she strews, El. 83. Around thee call The gilded swarm -Agr. 146. where the face of nature laughs around, E. G. 70. calls around The sleeping fragrance Vic. 5. The band around admire Stat} 7. to send the laughing bowl around, Prop} 7. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. Aroused. too soon they had aroused 'em Dante 48. Array. He wound with toilsome march his long array. Bard 12. with dirges due in sad array El. 113. Arrayed. Wisdom in sable garb array'd Adv. 25. Alone in nature's wealth array'd, Hoel<). Arrows. Cobham had . . . tip'd her arrows L. S. 32. Arrowy. Iron-sleet of arrowy shower Hurtles F. S. 3. Art. See also Sister-art. Where China's gayest art had dy'd Cat 2. Dear lost companions of my tuneful art, Bard 39. Lord of every regal art, Owen 7. ape her art of killing. L. S. 28. To hide her cares her only art, Clerke MS. 7. Art he invokes new horrors stiil to bring. View 12. Art it requires, and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. Each in her proper Art Prop? 62, Art, vb. no Traveller art thou, King of Men, Odin 81. No boding Maid of skill divine Art thou, din 85. I know not, who thou art; Dante 10. Oh! thou art cruel, Dante 45. Artful. with many an artful fib, L. S. 113. And blended form, with artful strife, Vic. 43. Artful and strong Stat} 3. With native spots and artful labour gay, Stat? 25. Her artful hand across the sounding Strings. Prop? 16. Arthur. No more our long-lost Arthur we bewail. Bard 109. another Arthur reigns. Bard MS. no. Arthur's. born of Arthur's line Bar d Lett. 2 116. Artless. their artless tale relate ; El. 94 ; Mas. 78. Arts. Fix and improve the polish'd Arts of Peace: E.G. 41. Here Arts are vain, Prop? 85. Arvon's. On dreary Arvon's shore they lie, Bard 35. As, omitted. Ascalon. And first to Ascalon their steps they bend, Tasso 1. Ashes. E'en in our Ashes live their wonted Fires. El. 92. buried ashes glow with social fires. El. Mas. 108. Asia. Why yet does Asia dread E. G. 59. Ask. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop? 1. Askance. Whom meaner Beauties eye askance, L. S. 27. Askaunce he turn'd him, Dante 83. Asked. He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoe/ 8. He ask'd and had the lovely maid. Hoel 10. Aspect. And hoary Nile with pensive Aspect Prop? 49. Aspire. With damp, cold touch forbid it to aspire, Ign. 21. Assassinations. Sorceries, Assassinations, poisonings — Agr. 172. Assign. The different doom our Fates assign. Bard 140. Assigned. To different Climes seem different Souls assign'd ? E. G. 39. Astonished 8 Aware Astonished. So from th' astonish'd stars, Stat. 1 53. At. At ease reclin'd in rustic state Spring 17. Scar'd at thy frown terrific, Adv. 17. drop'd his thirsty lance at thy command. P. P. 19. Hurls at their flying rear, P. P. MS. 52. and Pleasure at the helm; Bardq\. boast at home, Odin 87. at the shrine El. Mas. 71. at the peep of dawn El. 98. at the foot of yonder nodding beech, El. 101. at noontide would he stretch, El. 103. nor at the wood was he: El. 112. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. at the chappel-door stand sentry; L. S. 104. at the blush of dawn Inst. 30. At least there are who know Agr. 15. Scar'd at the sound, Agr. 32. eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 39. wonder'd at its daring: Agr. 55. tremble at the phantom Agr. 86. shake 'em at the name of liberty, Agr. 132. My thought aches at him; Agr. 160. shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. At length repair his vigour lost, Vic. 47. At Aix, his voluntary sword he drew, Williams 5. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. She swept, ... At Broom, Par. on Ep. 3. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Stat. 22. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop. 2 47. At once give loose to Utterance, Dante 9. when at the Gate Below I heard Dante 50. When Gaddo, at my Feet out-stretch'd, Dante 73. Athwart. And furthest send its weight athwart the field, Stat. 1 2. As when athwart the dusky woods by night Tasso 47. Atoms. shake ... To its original atoms — Agr. 92. Attempered. Attemper 'd sweet to virgin-grace. Bar d 118. All stones . . . mix attemper'd in a various day; Tasso 66. Attend. Still on thy solemn steps attend: Adv. 29. O Cambridge, attend To the Satire I've pen'd Satire I. A train of mourning Friends attend his Pall, Prop? 97. Attend, and say if he have injured me. Dante 21. Attends. Weddell attends your call, Com. Lines 1. Attic. The Attic warbler pours her throat, Spring 5. Attire. Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. Attracts. The diamond there attracts the wondrous sight, Tasso 69. Audience. The Audience stare, L. S. 109. Augments. Augments the native darkness of the sky; Ign. 8. Augustus. Here should Augustus great in Arms appear, Prop. 3 41. Aunt. Rummage his Mother, pinch his Aunt, L. S. 59. Auspicious. from that auspicious Night Prop? 25. Author. Who the Author of his fate. Odin 54. Autumnal. pour the autumnal rain; Prop. 2 26. Avail. Nor even thy virtues, Tyrant, shall avail Bard 6. Avails. The Bed avails not, Prop? 93. Avaunt. Hence, avaunt, ('t is holy ground) Inst. 1. Avenger. say, Who th' Avenger of his guilt, Odin 61. Avengers. Avengers of their native land: Bard 46. Averse. What Cat 's averse [a foe, Wal., Dods.] to fish? Cat 24. When, less averse, and yielding to Desires, Prop? 21. Averted. See Half-averted. Avoid. That to avoid, and this to emulate. Stat. 2 5. Avon. where lucid Avon stray'd, P. P. 85. Await. Man's feeble race what His await, P. P. 42. What dangers Odin's Child await, Odin 53. Awaits. Awaits alike th' inevitable hour. El., Dods., Pem., Eg. 35. Whom what awaits, Clerke 11. But what awaits me now is worst of all. Shak. 8. Awake. Awake, MoMan lyre, awake, P. P. 1. Prophetess, awake [arise, MS.], and say, din 74. Can honour's voice awake the silent dust, El. Mas. 43. Awake, and faithful to her wonted Fires. El. Dods. 92. Goddess! awake, arise! Ign. 25. She bids each slumb'ring energy awake, E. G. 78. To local symmetry and life awake! Bent. 8. Or if to Musick she the Lyre awake, Prop? 13. Aware. They are aware Of th' unpledg'd bowl, Agr. 20. Away 9 Barbarous Away. Brushing with hasty steps the dews away El. 99. Hence, away, 'tis holy ground! Inst. 12. their Kings, their Gods were roll'd away. E. G. 49. A tiger's pride the victor bore away, Stat. 2 24. •j-Some spin away their little lives Ode 39. ■{•'Till they loved their love away; Rond. 6. Awe. Rever'd With custom'd awe, the daughter, Agr. 118. Awe-commanding. JHer [A, IMS.] lyon-port, her [an, MS.] awe- commanding face, Bard 117. Aweful, Awful. did unveil Her aweful face: P. P. 87. Sighs to the torrent's aweful voice beneath! Bar d 24. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. Tell them, tho' 't is an awful thing to die, Stanza 1. vigorous he seem'd in years, Awful his mien, Tasso 13. Awhile. Yet awhile my call obey; Odin 73. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop. 3 105. Awoke. The Morn had scarce commenc'd, when I awoke: Dante 41. Azure. China's ... art had dy'd The azure flowers, Car 3. Thro' the azure deep of air: P. P. nj. While proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bard 72. A brighter Day, and Skies of azure Hue ; E. G. 55. B. fThey 're all diverted into H and B. Ch. Cr. 14. Babbles. pore upon the brook that babbles by. El. 104. Bacchus'. My soul in Bacchus' pleasing fetters bound; Prop. 2 8. Back. Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath ? El. 42. bring the buried ages back to view. Ign. 35. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop? 58. Take back, what once was yours. Dante 68. Backed. The Godhead would have back'd his quarrel, L. S. 93. Backward. Backward Meinai rolls his flood; Owen 28. Bacon. Yet hop'd, that he might save his bacon: L. S. 126. Ead. See also Bade. The Bad affright, afflict the Best! Adv. 4. She had a bad face Mrs. Keene 2. Bade. he . . . bad to form her infant mind. Adv. 12. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. bade him strike The noble quarry. <dgr. 46. You bade the magi call Agr. 64. who oft has bade, Ev'n when its will Agr. 69. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Stat. 1 9. Who measured out the year, and bad the seasons roll; Prop. 2 38. Badest. What sorrow was, thou bad'st her know, Adv. 15. Baffled. A baleful smile upon their baffled Guest. Bard 82. Baiae. ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baiae. Agr. 159, Balder. 'Tis the drink of Balder bold: Odin 46. Balder's. Baldens head to death is giv'n. din 47. Baleful. black Misfortune's baleful train! Eton 57. A baleful smile upon their baffled Guest. Bard 82. Ball. Or urge the flying ball ? Eton 30. yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 19. And now in dust the polish'd ball he roll'd, Stat} 41. Balls. See Eye-balls. Baltic. blue-eyed Myriads from the Baltic coast. E. G. 51. Band. To seize their prey the murth'rous band! Eton 59. Poverty, to fill the band, Eton 88. Not circled with the vengeful Band Adv. 36. a griesly band, I see them sit, Bard 44. Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 77. and strok'd down her band — C. C. 22. The band around admire the mighty mass, Stat. 1 7. Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band, Stat. 1 16. Bands. Joy to the victorious bands; F. S. 55. Bane. Orkney's woe, and Randver^s bane. F. S. 8. Banners. Confusion on thy banners wait, Bard 2. Thousand Banners round him burn: Owen 32. Barbaric. Like old Sesostris with barbaric pride; Ign. 37. Barbarous. sacrifice perforin 'd with barb'rous rites Agr. 62. Bard 10 Bed Bard. The bard, . . . Had in imagination fenc'd him, L.S. 113- There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. Sacred tribute of the bard, Conan 3. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop. 1 3. Bark. to his gilded bark With fond reluctance, Agr. 196. Baron. Girt with many a Baron bold Bard m. Baronets. From fumbling baronets and poets small, Shak. 6. Barons. Youthful knights and barons bold BardMS. ill. Barristers. Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright, Shak. 7. Bars. I heard the dreadful Clash of Bars, Dante 51. Base. Nor Envy base, Inst. 9. On this base My . . . revenge shall rise; Agr. 120. Basilisk. not the basilisk More deadly to the sight, Agr. 161. Batter. And batter Cadmus' walls Stat. 1 18. Battle. Heard ye the din of battle bray, Bard%T > . outcry of the battle ? -Agr. 96. Battlements. mouldering fanes and battlements View 13. Battle's. Echoing to the battle's roar. Owen 26. Battles. fBattles, Sieges, Men, and Arms, Ode 25. Bays. Hoarse he bays with hideous din, Odin 9. B— d's. nor B — d's promises been vain, View Nich. 18. Be, omitted. Beach. See Desert-beach. Beak. The terror of his beak, P. P. 24. Beam. that in thy noon-tide beam were born ? Bard 69. Nor see the sun's departing beam, Odin 68. with glitt'ring beam, Tasso 63. Beamed. With double light it beam'd against the day: Stat. 1 27. Beaming. •{•Bright beaming, as the Evening-star, her face; Ch. Cr. 8. Beams. ■[•Youth, his torrid Beams thay [that ?] plays, Ode 13. Beans. So the Master of Queen's Is as like as two beans; Satire 16. Bear. Wide o'er the fields of Glory bear P. P. 104. That the Theban Eagle bear P. P. 115. A Voice, . . . Gales from blooming Eden bear, Bard 132. A wond'rous Boy shall Rinda bear, Odin 65, The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear: El. 54. to bear the blaze of greatness; Agr. 45. The Fields to all their wonted Tribute bear; West 11. Beard. Loose his beard , and hoary hair Stream'd, Bard 1 9. His bushy beard, and shoe-strings green, L. S. 13. Bearded. In [Of, Lett. 2 ] bearded majesty, Bard 114. Bears. by Juno, It bears a noble semblance. Agr. 120. The Master of Trinity To him bears affinity; Satire 12. Beat. on these mould'ring bones have beat The winter's snow, Odin 31. Beating. To brisk notes in cadence beating, P. P. 34. Beaufort's. we trace ... a Beaufort's grace. Inst. 70. Beauteous. Two beauteous forms were seen to glide, Cat Wal., Dods. 14. Shall sink this beauteous fabric Prop. 2 28. Beauties. From hence, ye Beauties, Cat 37. Whom meaner Beauties eye askance, L. S. 27. And realis'd the beauties which [ruins that, MS.; horrors which, Nich.] we feign: View 20. and thousand beauties see Prop? 19. Beautified. beautified by fire, View MS. 21. Beauty. all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, El. 34. With beauty, with pleasure surrounded, to lan- guish, Am. Lines 1. Because. I . . . weep the more because I weep in vain. West 14. Become. ■(•as might a King become, Ch. Cr. 49. Bed. See also Summer-bed. Brave Urien sleeps upon his craggy bed: Bard^i. That calls me from the bed of rest ? Odin 36. Drest for whom yon golden bed. Odin 42. shall rouse them from their lowly bed. El. 20. And o'er the bed and tester clamber, L. S. 64. tost On the thorny bed of Pain, Vic. 46. the obedient river's inmost bed ; Tasso 44. The Po was there to see, Danubius' bed, Tasso 55. stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop 2 41 . To die is glorious in the Bed of Love. Prop? 64. The Bed avails not, Prop? 93. Bse 11 Below Bee. The pure bev'rage of the bee, Odin 44. Beech. the rude and moss-grown beech Spring 13. the foot of yonder nodding beech, El. 101. Been. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, "had Bute been true, View 17. nor B — d's promises been vain, View Nich. 18. Bee's. The bee's collected treasures sweet, Inst. 62. B<fes. drink Nectar that the bees produce, Hoel 1 7. Beetle. Save where the beetle wheels bis droning flight, El. 7. Befall. fair befall the victors. Agr. 153. Eefell. Ah! say, . . . how these symptoms befell me? Am. Lines 7. Before. With pangs unfelt before, Adv. 8. Yet oft before his infant eyes P. P. 118. Till full before his fearless eyes Odin 15. The Seal, and Maces, danc'd before him. L. S. 12. there before His high tribunal Agr. 143. Let him feel Before he sees me. Agr. 164. The dusky people drive before the gale; E. G. 105. When you rise from your Dinner as light as before, Couplet 1. His vigorous arm he tried before he flung, Stat. 2 6. before the warriors' eyes . . . the waves disparted rise; Tasso 39. Before the Goddess' shrine we . . . bend, Prop} 2. my other three before my Eyes Died Dante 75. ■|And brings all Womankind before your view; Ch. Cr. 59. ■jAYith Woe behind, and Wantonness before. Ch.Cr. 61. Began. See also 'gan. they that fly, Shall end where they began. Spring 34. Phlegyas the long-expected play began, Stat. 1 32. thus Began. Would'st thou revive Dante 4. Beget. the telling may Beget the Traitour's Infamy, Dante 7. Begged. And beg'd his aid that dreadful day. L. S. 92. Begin. There the thund'ring strokes begin, Owen 23. ■j-Or, soon as they begin to blow Ode 5. Beginning. What, in the very first beginning! L. S. 17. Begins. Now the storm begins to lower F. S.i. Eegone. T is well, begone! Ag r - 1 - Begs. Tis Willy begs, Shah 3. Beguiled. The slipp'ry verge her feet beguil'd, Cat 29. have beguil'd . . . the dazzled sight Agr. 190. Beheld. Has he beheld the glittering front of war ? Agr. 94. his helpless offspring soon O'erta'en beheld, Dante 39. when I beheld My Sons, Dante 61. Behind. Still as they run they look behind, Eton 38. And Shame that sculks behind; Eton 64. Amazement in his van, . . . and solitude be- hind. Bard 62- cast one longing ling'ring look behind ? El. 88. Behind the steps that Misery treads, Vic. 39. She felt the wound she left behind, Gierke 8. fWith Woe behind, and Wantonness before. Ch. Cr. 61. Behold. Behold, where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. High on her car, behold the grandam ride Ign. 36. And bids the pure in heart behold their God. Stanza 4. f Behold K struts, Ch. Cr. 49. Being. This pleasing anxious being El. 86. To her that gave it being, Agr. 29. Beldams. Wrinkled beldams teach it Agr. 134. Believe. Who will, believe. L. S. 73. Believed. they vow their truth, and are again believed. Adv. 24- he believed in a God: Char. 4. Belike. might serve belike to wake pretensions Agr. 103. Bellisle's. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams 10. Bellow. created but to . . . bellow in the Circus Agr. 131. Belly. She strok'd up her belly, C. C. 22. And Balguy with a bishop in his belly. Com. Lines 7. Beloved. Ah, fields belov'd in vain, Eton 12. Below. Selima . . . Gazed on the lake below. Cat 6. th* expanse below . . . survey Eton 6. Above, below, the rose of snow, ... we spread: Bard 91. And the weights, that play below, F. S. 11. Tell me what is done below, Odin 40. And men below Join with glad voice Inst. 87. Insult the plenty of the vales below ? E. G. 99. Bend 12 Beyond Far below, the crowd. Vic. 57. Her infant image here below, Sits smiling Clerke 9. when at the Gate Below I heard Dante 51. Bend. Virgins . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 76. a team of harness'd monarchs bend Ign. 38. And first to Ascalon their steps they bend, Tasso 3. Before the Goddess 1 shrine we too, love's vot'ries, bend, Prop. 1 2. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop. 3 48. Bending. bending o'er th' accursed loom Bard 95. Bends. Meek Newton's self bends from his state sublime, Inst. 25. Where melancholy friendship bends, and weeps. Williams 12. Beneath. in the vale of tears beneath Eton 81. beneath the od'rous shade P. P. 58. Beneath the Good how far — P. P. 123. Sighs to the torrent's aweful voice beneath! Bard 24. Boar . . . Wallows beneath the thorny shade. Bar d 94. The groaning earth beneath him shakes, Odin 14. Beneath those rugged elms, that yew-tree's shade, El. 13. bow'd the woods beneath their sturdy stroke. El. 28. the stone beneath yon aged thorn. El. 116. in the park beneath an old-tree, L. S. 122. Fade and expire beneath the eye of day ? E. G. 67. Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat. 2 20. The river boil'd beneath, Tasso 24. he led Beneath the obedient river's inmost bed; Tasso 44. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop? 39. •(•reclined beneath the Tree-zes; Ode 22. Benefits. benefits too great To be repaid, Agr. 74. Benet. The Master of Benet Is of the like tenet; Satire 27. Benighted. steep in slumbers each benighted sense ? Ign. 18. not to one in this benighted age Bent. 17. Benign. Thy form benign, oh Goddess, wear, Adv. 41. Bent. Again she bent, Cat 26. While some on earnest business bent Eton 31. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat. 1 34. Bentley. While Bentley leads her sister-art along, Bent. 3. Bereft. the panting Sire Of Strength bereft, Dante 38. Berkley's. The shrieks of death, thro' Berkley's roofs that ring, Bard 55. Beside. nor yet beside the rill, El. in. His young ones ran beside him. Dante 32. Besides. Besides, he repents — C. C. 30. Bespangled. See Dew-bespangled. Best. The Bad affright, afflict the Best! Adv. 4. Her household cares, a woman's best employment. Agr. 8. Grease his best pen, Shak. 16. Bestow. A momentary bliss bestow, Eton 16. Bestowed. you bestow'd The very power he has Agr. 80. Bestride. Each bestride her sable steed. F. S. 63. Now your sable steed bestride, F. S. MS. 63. Bethel. The prophet of Bethel, we read, told a lie: C. C. 27. Betray. sickly Plants betray a niggard Earth, E.G.i. Betrayed. Betray'd a golden gleam, Cat 18. that I was betray'd By trusting, Dante 16. Better. Better to bottom tarts Shak. 17. Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Shak. 18. Better be twisted into caps for spice, Shak. 19. Far better [other, MS.] scenes than these View 19. Betties. •j-EIizabeths all dwindled into Betties; Ch. Cr. 12. Between. Nor knew the gulf between. Cat 27. Divinity heard, between waking and dozing, C. C. 19. +And seems small difference the sounds between; Ch. Cr. 46. Betwixt. Age step 'twixt love and me, Prop. 2 12. Beverage. The pure bev'rage of the bee, Odin 44. Bewail. No more our long-lost Arthur we bewail. Bard 109. Bewitched. Bewitch'd the children of the peasants, L. S. 46. Beyond. Nor care beyond to-day: Eton 54. In climes beyond the solar road, P. P. 54. Beyond the limits of a vulgar fate, P. P. 122. Charity, that glows beyond the tomb. Inst. 50 extends Beyond their chronicle — Agr. 138. Beyond the confines of our narrow world: Tasso 34. Bid 13 Blood Bid. She smiled, and bid him come to dinner. L. S. 132. bid it . . . shed The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 73. raise, and bid it fire A thousand . . . hearts, Agr. 16. ■f-Whose influence first bid it live. Ode 54. Bids. sacred Calm, . . . Bids ev'ry . . . Passion cease; El. Mas. 82. She bids each slumb'ring energy awake, E. G. 78. Ijids the pencil answer to the lyre. Bent. 4. And bids the pure in heart behold their God. Stanza 4. fBids the poetick Spirit flourish; Ode 14. Big. Big with hosts . . . Squadrons . . . came; Owen 9. Big with the important Nothing's History. Prop. 3 30. . fSo big with Weddings, waddles W, Ch. Cr. 58. Billows. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Binds. And winter binds the floods in icy chains, Tasso 18. Bird. See aho Newgate-bird. No tree is heard to whisper, bird to sing; View 10. Birdlime. Transparent birdlime form'd the middle, L. S. 83. Birds. and Birds of boding cry, P. P. 50. The Birds in vain their amorous Descant joyn; West 3. To warm their little Loves the Birds complain: West 12. The Birds his presence greet: Vie. 12. Birth. To thee he gave the heav'nly Birth, Adv. 11. Science frown'd not on his humble birth, El. 119. High potentates, and dames of royal birth, Inst. 37. flinty Bosom starves her generous Birth, E. G. 2. the human fabric from the birth Imbibes E. G. 84. The birth of rivers riseing to their course, Tasso 52. Bishop. And Balguy with a bishop in his belly. Com. Lines 7. The Bishop of Chester, Ext. Keene 1. Lord Bishop of Chester, Ep. Keene 1. Here lies Mrs. Keene the she Bishop of Chester, Mrs. Keene I. Bite. Soon a King shall bite the ground. F. S. 44. Biting. See Sheep-biting. Bitter. To bitter Scorn a sacrifice, Eton 73. Bitterness. The Bitterness of Death, I shall unfold. Dante 20. Black. See also Coal-black. black Misfortune's baleful train! Eton 57. in black clouds of slumber P. P. MS. 23. Mista black, F. S. 17. Black and huge along they sweep, Owen 17. Blacken. blacken round our weary way, Vic. 35. Blacker. the blacker his ingratitude. Agr. 173. Blade. Blade, that once a Monarch bore, F. S. Whar. 15. Blade [Sword, Whar.] with clattering buckler meet, F. S. 23. Blast. blast the vernal Promise of the Year. E. G. 21. ■fOr Poppy-thoughts blast all the shoots. Ode 12. Blasted. blasted with excess of light, P. P. 101. of Jove, and Phlegra's blasted Plain; Prop? 56. Blaze. See Sapphire-blaze. to bear the blaze of greatness; Agr. 45. How shall the spark . . . Blaze into freedom, Agr. 129. in the diamond's blaze, Bent. 21. Blazing. no more the blazing hearth shall burn, El. 21. When blazing 'gainst the sun Stat. 1 30. Bleak. desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F. S. 38, the rigour Of bleak Germania's snows. Agr. 1 10. Bled. Though by me ye bled, He was the cause. Agr. 1 80. Bleeding. Cbatillon . . . That wept her bleeding Love, Inst. 42. Blended. And blended form, with artful strife, Vic. 43. Bless. Than Pow'r and Genius e'er conspir'd to bless. El. Mas. 76. a glance . . . They send ... To bless the place, Inst. 21. Blessed. See also Blest. Our mother-church, . . . Blush 'd as she bless'd her griesly proselyte; Toph. 6. Blest. See also Blessed. While spirits blest above . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 87. Far better scenes than these had blest [grac'd, Nich.] our view, View 19. Blighting. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Bliss. A momentary bliss bestow, Eton 16. where ignorance is bliss, Eton 99. The hues of Bliss more brightly glow, Vic. 41. Blood. keen Remorse with blood defil'd, Eton 78. By whom shall Hoder^s blood be spilt ? Odtn 62. Bloody 14 Check'd by the torrent-tide of blood, Owen 27. Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. El. 60. the blood Of Agrippina's race, Agr. 37. its will seem'd wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. the genuine blood Of our imperial house. Agr. 104. If murder cries for murder, blood for blood, Agr. 185. Force and hardy Deeds of Blood prevail. E. G. 44. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; Williams 6. Bloody. And weave with bloody hands Bard\%. Bursting through the bloody throng Hoel 22. chas'd by Hell-hounds gaunt and bloody Dante 30. Bloom. The bloom of young Desire, P. P. 41 A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child 4 There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop. 2 10 Blooming. A Voice, . . . Gales from blooming Eden bear Bard 132 Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 11 Blossoms. trusts her Blossoms to the churlish Skies. E. G. 8 Blot. Clouds of carnage blot [veil, Whar.] the sun. F. S. 50. Blow. The azure flowers, that blow; Cat 3. I feel the gales, that from ye blow, Eton 15. flowers, that round them blow, P. P. 5. ■(•Or, soon as they begin to blow Ode 5. Blows. soft the Zephyr blows, Bard 71. Blue. Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. With bonnet blue . . . they hid their armour, L. S. 37. And rubies flame, with sapphire's heavenly blue, Tasso 68. Blue-eyed. With antic Sports, and blue-eyed Pleasures, P. P. 30. The blue-eyed Myriads from the Baltic coast. E.G. 51. Blush. many a flower is born to blush unseen, El. 55. But with a blush on recollection Own'd, L. S. 94. Oft at the blush of dawn I trod Inst. 30. Blushed. Our mother-church, . . . Blush'd Toph. 6. Blushes. quench the blushes of ingenuous shame, El. 70. Blushing. Twined with her blushing foe, Bard 92. The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 74. Half pleas'd, half blushing, Bent. 2. Border Blustering. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Boar. The bristled Boar in infant-gore Wallows Bard 93. Have ye seen the dusky boar, Caradoc 1. Board. For whom yon glitt'ring board is spread, Odin 41. partake His hospitable board: Agr. 20. Boast. Hie thee hence, and boast at home, Odin 87. The boast of heraldry, El. 33. theirs, who boast the genuine blood Agr. 104. The schoolman's glory, and the churchman's boast. Ign. 32. Let him stand forth his brawny arm to boast. •j-these Flies Stat. 1 3. Can boast of one good Quality; Ode 50. Boasted. Her boasted Titles and her golden Fields; E. G. 53. Boding. and Birds of boding cry, P. P. 50. No boding Maid of skill divine Art thou, din 84. Boiled. The river boil'd beneath, Bold. be with caution bold. Some bold adventurers disdain Girt with many a Baron bold T is the drink of Balder bold: Bolt. To aim the forked bolt; Bolts. the dreadful Clash of Bars, And fast'ning Bolts: Dante 52. Bonds. lord, That broke the bonds of Rome. Bones. Long on these mould'ring bones these bones from insult to protect Bonnet. With bonnet blue . . . they hid fa Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, or Caelia's Bonnet. Ode 36. Book. 'T is just like the picture in Rochester's book; C. C. 12. Though now a book, and interleaved you see. Shak. 4. T is ample Matter for a Lover's Book; Prop? 28. Books. Papers and books, a huge Imbroglio! L. S. 66. Bootes'. And what Bootes' lazy waggon tires; Prop. 2 36. Border. chains invisible [form'd] the border. L. S. 84. A shining border round the margin roll'd, Stat. 2 26. Tasso 24. Cat 39. Eton 35. Pard III. Odin 46. Agr. 21. Inst. 47. Odin 31. El. 77. L. S. 37. Borders 15 Brave Borders. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous bor- ders, Toph. 7. Bore. thy rigid lore With patience . . . she bore: Adv. 14. Sword, that once a Monarch bore, F. S. 15. So Caradoc bore his lance. Caradoc 4. The pond'rous brass in exercise he bore; Stat. 1 37. A tiger's pride the victor bore away, Stat. 2 24. His head a chaplet bore, Tasso 16. Boreas'. As on the Rhine, when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. Bom. See also High-born, New-born. And lively chear of vigour born; Eton 47. She-Wolf . . . From thee be born, Bard 59. that in thy noon-tide beam were born ? Bard 69. born of Arthur's line Bard Lett. 2 116. many a flower is born to blush unseen, El. 55. thro' the church-way path we saw him born. — El. 114. two youths advance, Achaians born, Stat. 1 10. Borne. See also Born. so was she borne By the young Trojan Agr. 195. Much have I borne from canker 'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. may my pale Coarse be borne. Prop? 78. Bosom. O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, P. P. 40. The bosom of his Father and his God. El. 128. a niggard Earth, Whose flinty Bosom E. G. 2. From his broad bosom life and verdure flings E. G. 102. And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop? 88. Bosomed. See Rosy-bosomed. Bosoms. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame Prop. 2 53. Bottom. Better to bottom tarts Shak. 17. Bounce. But bounce into the parlour enter'd. L. S. 56. Bound. Bound in thy adamantine chain, Adv. 5. The orb . . . Far overleaps all bound, Stat. 2 12. My soul in Bacchus' pleasing fetters bound; Prop. 2 8. fThen to sever what is bound, Rond. 31. Boundless. the od'rous shade Of Chili's boundless forests P.P. S9 . They perish in the boundless deep. Vic. 60. Bounds. the flaming bounds of Place and Time: P. P. 98. either Poie, and Life's remotest Bounds, E. G. 25. How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop. 2 37. The torrent-stream his ancient bounds disdains, Tasso 9. Bounty. Large was his bounty, El. 121. Rich streams of regal bounty pour'd, Inst. 52. Bow. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bard 34. The thoughtless World to Majesty may bow, El. Mas. 73, bow the supple knee, and court the times Agr. 101. I saw them bow, Toph. 3. Bowed. How bow'd the woods beneath their . . . stroke! El. 28. While frighted prelates bow'd Toph. 2. Bowels. That tear'st the bowels of thy mangled Mate, Bard 58. Bower. wand'ring near her secret bow'r, El. 11. Bowers. in these consecrated bowers, ■ Inst. 7. ye ever gloomy bowers, Ye gothic fanes, Ign. I. Bowl. Fill high the sparkling bowl, Bard "]j. they are aware Of th' unpledg'd bowl, Agr. 21. Give me to send the laughing bowl around, Prop. 2 7. Bows. When Pindus' self . . . bows his hundred heads; Prop. 2 32. Boy. Thine too these golden keys, immortal Boy! P. P. 91. Yet thou, proud boy, Bard MS. 75. A wond'rous Boy shall Rinda bear, Odin 65. unus'd to shake When a boy frowns, Agr. 18. a puny boy, Agr. 36. we may meet, ungrateful boy, we may! Agr. 140. Boys. they wept, unhappy Boys! Dante 54. Brace. issues A brace of Warriors, not in buff, L. S. 23. Braced. Brac'd all his nerves, Stat. 2 7. Bradshaw's. Nor Mungo's, Rigby's, Bradshaw's [Calcraft's, MS.] friendship vain, View 18. Branches. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch Spring 11. Brass. A slipp'ry weight, and form'd of polish 'd brass. Stat. 1 8. The pond'rous brass in exercise he bore; Stat. 1 37. the nations . . . Their cymbals toss, and sound- ing brass explore; Stat. 1 57. Brave. Brave Urien sleeps upon his craggy bed: Bard 31. Exalt the brave, and idolize Success; El. Mas. 74. Four, not less brave, That in Armenia quell Agr. 1 10. Brawling 16 Bristled brave the savage rushing from the wood, E. G. 93. But none . . . return, Save Ae'ron brave, Hoel 21. Brawling. so grinned the brawling fiend, Toph. I. Brawls. My grave Lord-Keeper led the Brawls; L. S. 11. Brawny. Let him stand forth his brawny arm to boast. Stat. 1 3. Bray. Heard ye the din of battle bray, Bard 83. Bread. I heard 'em wail for Bread. Dante 45. Break. To break the quiet of the tomb ? Odin 28. Enquirer come To break my iron-sleep again; Odin 89. If any spark . . . Break out, Ign. 20. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. Here gems break through the night Tasso 63. Breast. See also Red-breast. The sunshine of the breast, Eton 44. Thou Tamer of the human breast, Adv. 2. Tyrant of the throbbing breast. Bar d 1 30. that chills the throbbing breast. Bard Lett. 2 130. Some village-Hampden, . . . with dauntless breast El. 57. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. in my Breast the imperfect Joys expire. West 8. if to some feeling breast Bent. 25. With eyes of flame, and cool undaunted breast, Williams 9. the Mistress of my faithful breast, Prop? 71. Breasts. the spark . . . that glows within their breasts, Agr. 128. Breath. See also Breathe. yon sanguine cloud, Rais'd by thy breath, Bard 136. There . . . Agony, that pants for breath, Owen 39. Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath ? El. 42 Sweet is the breath of vernal shower, Inst. 61. Few were the days allotted to his breath; Child 5. my Fates that breath they gave shall claim, Prop? 99. Breathe. To breathe a second spring. Eton 20. Thoughts, that breath, and words, that burn. P.P. no. Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breath; Bard 26. They breathe a soul to animate thy clay. Bar d 1 22. And breathe and walk again: Vic. 48. Breathed. Inspiration breath'd around : P. P. 74. Slowly breath'd a sullen sound. Odin 26. thee, whose influence breathed from high Ign. 7. Has Scythia breath'd the . . . Cloud of War; E. G. 47. Breathing. See also Incense-breathing, Solemn-breathing, the new Fragrance of the breathing Rose, E. G. 56. Breeding. fin Episode, to show my breeding: Ode 28. Breezes. •j-Purling streams and cooling breezes Ode 20. Breezy. The breezy call of incense-breathing Morn, EL 17. Bribe. Too poor for a bribe, Char. 1. Bridal. on her bridal morn Inst. 41. Bridget. Jesu-Maria! Madam Bridget, L. S. 133. Brief. In brief whate'er she do, or say, or look, Prop? 27. Bright. See also Silver-bright. In yon bright track [clouds, MS.], Bard 103. Bright Rapture calls, and . . . Waves Bard 123. they . . . veil'd their weapons bright and keen L. S. 39. What the bright reward we gain? Inst. 59. If bright ambition from her craggy seat, Agr. 51. Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright, Shak. 7. As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, Stat} 26. Why does yon Orb, so exquisitely bright, Prop. 2 33. ■{•Bright beaming, as the Evening-star, Ch. Cr. 8. Brighter. the Brood of Winter view A brighter Day, E. G. 55. Bright-eyed. Bright-eyed [Full-plumed, MS.] Fancy P. P. 108. While bright-eyed Science watches round: Inst. 11. Brightly. The hues of Bliss more brightly glow, Vic. 41. Brightness. dazzled with its brightness? Agr. 32. Bring. hours, that bring constraint Eton 33. bring the buried ages back to view. Ign. 35. Art he invokes new horrors still to bring. View 12. Brings. The laureate wreath, that Cecil wore she brings, Inst. 84. new-born Pleasure brings to happier men : West 10. That Slumber brings to aid my Poetry. Prop? 20. fAnd brings all Womankind before your view; Ch. Cr. 59. Brink. Beside some water's rushy brink Spring 15. Brisk. To brisk notes in cadence beating, P. P. 34. Bristled. The bristled Boar in infant-gore Wallows Bard 93. Britain 17 Buried Britain. And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. Britain's. Owen . . . Britain's gem. Owen 4. In Britain's Isle, ... An ancient pile . . . stands: L. S. I. Britannia's. ye genuine Kings, Britannia's Issue, hail! Bard no. Britannicus. To hear the spirit of Britannicus Agr. 14. Briton-line. Her eye proclaims her of the Briton-Line; Bard 116. Broad. From his broad bosom life and verdure flings E. G. 102. Where broad and turbulent it grows Vic. 58. Broader. branches stretch A broader browner shade; Spring 12. Broke. The Muse has broke the twilight-gloom P. P. 56. Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke: El. 26. lord, That broke the bonds of Rome. Inst. 47. As when from .(Etna's smoking summit broke, Stat. 2 18. Broken. strive to mend A broken character View 4. Brood. See also Giant-brood, Monster-brood. fly Self-pleasing Folly's idle brood, Adv. 18. the Brood of Winter view A brighter Day, E. G. 54. Brooded. He nor heaps his brooded stores, Owen 5. Broods. sacred Calm, that broods around, El. Mas. 81. broods o'er Egypt with his wat'ry wings, E. G. 103. Brook. pore upon the brook that babbles by. El. 104. Broom. At Broom, Pendragon, Appleby and Brough. Par. on Ep. 3. Brother. His Brother sends him to the tomb. Odin 56. Brothers. Brothers, . . . Stamp we our vengeance deep, Bard^. Brough. At Broom, Pendragon, Appleby and Brough. Par. on Ep. 3. Brow. from the stately brow Of Windsor's heights Eton 5. a rock, whose haughty brow Frowns Bard 15. Virgins . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 77. the high brow of yonder hanging lawn. El. Mas. 116. Edward, with the lilies on his brow Inst. 39. to grace thy youthful brow, The laureate wreath, Inst. 83. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. things, that . . . Have arch'd the hearer's brow, Agr. 169. the . . . cloud That hangs on thy clear brow. Agr. 194. Smiles on past Misfortune's brow . . . Reflec- tion's hand can trace; Vic. 29. Brown. Ye brown o'er-arching groves, Inst. 27. Browner. A broader browner shade; Spring 12. Brunswick. The star of Brunswick smiles serene, Inst. 93. Brush. With hasty footsteps brush the dews away. El. Mas. 115. Brushed. Brush'd by the hand of rough Mischance, Spring 38. Brushing. Brushing with hasty steps the dews away El. 99. Bubbles. Whate'er . . . Floats into Lakes, and bubbles into rills; Tasso 54. Buckler. Blade with clattering buckler meet, F. S. 23. Buds. And the buds that deck the thorn! Song 4. •(•My cold soil nips the Buds with Snow. Ode 6. Buff. issues A brace of Warriors, not in buff, L. S. 23. Build. The Red-breast loves to build, El. Pem. 119; Mas. 139. Build to him the lofty verse, Conan 2. Buildings. An ancient pile of buildings stands: L. S. 2. Builds. Humble quiet builds her cell, Vic. 53. Built. See Ice-built, Straw-built. Bulk. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop?^. Bull. Have ye seen ... the bull, . . . advance ? Caradoc 2. Bullen's. gospel-light first dawn'd from Bullen's eyes. E. G. 109. Bumper. with bumper in hand, C. C. 21. Burdens. Burthens of the angry deep. Owen 18. Buried. the buried Natives dull abode. P. P. MS. 57. buried ashes glow with social fires. El. Mas. 108. Again the buried Genius of old Rome Agr. 141. bring the buried ages back to view. Ign. 35. Burn 18 Came Burn. Thoughts, that breath, and words, that burn. P. P. no. Thousand Banners round him burn: Owen 32. no more the blazing hearth shall burn, El. 21. Burn incense kindled at the Muse's flame. El. Mas. 72. Flush'd with mirth and hope they burn: Hoel 19. ■\1 burn to write; Ode 27. Burns. inspiration . . . That burns in Shakespeare's . . . page, Bent. 19. Burrhus. dress thy plea, and Burrhus strengthen it Agr. 1 50. Burrows. •(•With Rooks and Rabbit burrows Ch. Cr. 56. Burst. Till Lok has burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. the deluge burst, with sweepy sway E. G. 48. Bursting. Bursting through the bloody throng Hoel 22. Bursts. Bursts on my ear th' indignant lay: Inst. 14. fthe rolling Sun Bursts the inactive Shell, Ode 44. Burthens. See Burdens. Bushy. His bushy beard, and shoe-strings green, L. S. 13. Business. While some on earnest business bent Eton 31. Buskined. In buskin'd measures move Pale Grief, Bard 128. fTragick Numbers, buskin'd Strains, Ode^\. Buss. Come buss me — C. C. 32. Bust. Can storied urn or animated bust El. 41. Busy. The busy murmur glows! Spring 24. Alike the Busy and the Gay Spring 35. shall . . . busy housewife ply El. 22. Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. But, omitted. Bute. had Bute been true, View 17. Butter. Without design to hurt the butter, L. S. 123. Butterflies. fLike Butterflies, their Prison shun Ode 45. Buxom. Theirs buxom health of rosy hue, Eton 45. Buzzing. •(•Buzzing with all their parent Faults; Ode 46. By, omitted. C— 's. nor C — "s, nor B — d's promises View Nich. 18. Cadence. To brisk notes in [the, MS.] cadence beating, P. P. 34. Cadmus '. And batter Cadmus' walls with stony showers, Stat. 1 18. Cadwallo's. Cold is Cadwallo's tongue, Bard 29. Caelia's. fa Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, or Cadia's Bonnet. Ode 36. Caesar. Caesar guiltless of his country's blood. El. Mas. 60. Caesars. wife, And mother of their Caesars. Agr. 119. Calcraft's. nor Shelburne's, Rigby's, Calcraft's friendship vain, View MS. 18. Call. What call [voice, MS.] unknown, what charms presume Odin 27. Once again my call obey, Odin 51. Yet awhile my call obey; din 73. lurk'd A wicked Imp they call a Poet, L. S. 44. The breezy call of incense-breathing Morn, El. 17. Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath ? El. 42. You bade the Magi call the . . . powers, Agr. 64. a call, Like mine, might serve ... to wake Agr. 102. around thee call The gilded swarm Agr. 146. Weddell attends your call, Com. Lines 1. ■(the Pisgys call him Puck, Ch. Cr. 31. Called. bow'd and called him friend; Top h. 2. Phlegyas . . . call'd forth all the man. Stat. 1 33. Callimachus'. But nor Callimachus' enervate Strain Prop? 55. Calling. Nor thou my gentle Calling disapprove, Prop? 63. often calling On their dear Names, Dante 79. Calls. Bright Rapture calls, and . . . Waves Bard 123. That calls me from the bed of rest? Odin 36. A Traveller, ... Is he that calls, Odin 38. calls around The sleeping fragrance Vic. 5. Calm. the sacred Calm, that broods around, El. Mas. 81. Calmed. calm'd the terrors of his claws in gold. Stat? 27. Cambria's. From Cambria's curse, from Cambria's tears! Bard 8. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 27. From Cambria's thousand hills Bard MS. 109. Cambridge. O Cambridge, attend To the Satire I 've pen'd Satire 1. Came. No Dolphin came, Cat 34. Squadrons three against him came; Owen 10. Another came; nor yet beside the rill, El. in. Camp 19 Cast The first came cap-a-pee from France L. S. 25. By acclamations roused, came tow'ring Stat. 1 14. Third in the labours of the disc come [came] on, Stat? 1. Yet a fourth Day came Dante 72. Camp. the Praetorian camp have long rever'd Agr. 117. Camus. willowy Camus lingers with delight! Inst. 29. Camus'. rushy Camus' slowly-winding flood Ign. 3. Can. This can unlock the gates of Joy; P. P. 92. never can he fear a vulgar fate, P.P. MS. 122. Pain can reach the Sons of Heav'n! Odin 48. Can storied urn or animated bust El. 41. Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust, £/. 43 . Can you do nothing but describe ? L. S. 20. Why, what can the Viscountess mean ? L. S. 134. Go! you can paint it well Agr. 12. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 108. Can powers immortal feel the force of years ? Ign. 26. Can opener skies . . . O'erpower the fire E. G. 64. what seasons can control, . . . the soul, E. G. 72. What fancied Zone can circumscribe E. G. 73. Smiles . . . Soft Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 30. Whoe'er the quoit can wield, Stat: What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop? 30. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop. 2 45. The Power of Herbs can other Harms remove, Prop? 79. The Hand that can my captive heart release, Prop. 3 87. who can probe the undiscover'd Wound ? Prop? 92. Nor changing Skies can hurt, Prop? 94. ■jthese Flies, . . . Can boast of one good Quality; Ode 50. ■fp, Proteus-like ... all shapes can shew, Ck. Cr. 43. Cankered. Much have I borne from canker'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. Cannot. I fruitless mourn to him that cannot hear, West 13. cannot furnish out the feast, View MS. 11. Canopies. See O'er-canopies. Canst. read (for thou can'st read) the lay, El. 115. Can't. When she died, I can't tell, C. C. 14. Cap-a-pee. See Cap-a-pie. Cap-a-pie. The first came cap-a-pee from France L. S. 25. Caps. Better be twisted into caps for spice, Shak. 19. Captive. The captive linnet which enthral ? Eton 27. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. And scepter'd Alexandria's captive Shore, Prop? 45. The Hand that can my captive heart release, Prop? 87. Capucine. With . . . capucine . . . they hid their armour, L. S. 37. Car. Has curb'd the fury of his car, P. P. 18. where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. High on her car, behold the grandam ride Ign. 36. The laurell'd Triumph and the sculptured Carr; Prop? 34. Caradoc. Leave your despairing Caradoc Bar d MS. 102. So Caradoc bore his lance. Caradoc 4. Care. Still is the toiling hand of Care: Spring 21. Nor care beyond to-day: Eton 54. Envy wan, and faded Care, Eton 68. Be thine Despair, and scept'red Care, Bard 141. busy housewife ply her evening care: El. 22. craz'd with care, or cross'd in . . . love. El. 108. and thus relieved their care: Tasso 26. And thou Mecasnas, be my second Care; Prop? 42. nor the leeche's Care, Prop? 93. Careless. Where once my careless childhood stray 'd, Eton 13. but, careless grown, Lethargic nods Ign. 23. And sing with what a careless Grace she flings Prop? 15. ■(■And careless spares to weed the Plain: Ode 10. Cares. the sullen Cares And frantic Passions hear P. P. 1 5. anxious Cares and endless Wishes El. Mas. 86. Antium; there to tend Her household cares, Agr. 8. unfriended, by those kindly Cares, E. G. 10. Carnage. Clouds of carnage blot the sun. F. S. 50. his jaws, with carnage fill'd, Odin 7. Carry. Carry to him thy timid counsels. Agr. 87. Carthage. Nor lofty Carthage struggleing with her Fate. Prop? 40. Case. To Phoebus he prefer'd his case, L. S. 91. Cassius. Cassius; Vetus too, and Thrasea, Agr. 125. Cast. cast one longing ling'ring look behind ? El. 88. minds of the antique cast, Agr. 126. cast me forth in duty to their lord. Agr. 157. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat?<). Castalia's 20 Chappel-door Castalia's. Me may Castalia's sweet recess detain, Prop? 2. Catch. Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 16. Catch the new Fragrance of the . . . Rose, E. G. 56. catch a lustre from his genuine flame. Bent. 12. could they catch his strength, Bent. 13. Catches. Why, David lov'd catches, C. C. 24. Catherine. The Master of Catherine Takes them all for his pattern; Satire 19. Cato. Some village Cato, . . . with dauntless breast El. Mas. 57. Cat 's. What Cat 's averse to fish ? Cat 24. Cattraeth's. To Cattraeth's vale . . . Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel II. But none from Cattraeth's vale return, Hoel 20. Cause. a cause To arm the hand of childhood, Agr. 138. Though by me ye bled, He was the cause. Agr. 181. Th' Event presages, and explores the Cause. E. G. 33. To weep without knowing the cause of my an- guish: Am. Lines 2. That first, eternal, universal Cause; Prop? 18. Caution. be with caution bold. Cat 39. Cautious. I must be cautious, Agr. 85. Cave. each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 23. Caverns. In the caverns of the west, Odin 63. Caves. The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean El. 54. Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. Cease. Sisters, cease, the work is done. F. S. 52. Cease, my doubts, my fears to move, Song 11. Bids ev'ry . . . Passion cease; El. Mas. 82. Ceaseless. whom thus I ceaseless gnaw insatiate; Dante 8. Cecil. The laureate wreath, that Cecil wore Inst. 84. Ceiling's. To raise the cieling's fretted height, L. S, 5. Celebrate. To celebrate her eyes, her air — L. S. 33. Celestial. Murmur'd a celestial sound. P. P. MS. 76. once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. Rapt in celestial transport they: Inst. 18. Cell. Each in his narrow cell for ever laid, El. 15. Humble quiet builds her cell, Vic. 53. A heart, within whose sacred cell Clerke 3. Cells. Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. Censure. To censure cold, and negligent of fame, Bent. 10. Centering. •jCent'ring, rivets heart to heart, Rond. 30. Ceres. Thro' verdant vales, and Ceres' golden reign: P. P. 9. Chain. Bound in thy adamantine chain, Adv. 5. Till Lok has burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. Servitude that hugs her chain, Inst. 6. Chains. Vice, that revels in her chains. P. P. 80. And chains invisible the border. L. S. 84. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoel 14. And winter binds the floods in icy chains, Tasso 18. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop? 48. Chair. Close by the regal chair Bard 80. She curtsies, as she takes her chair, L. S. 1 1 1. Chamber. they explore, Each . . . cranny of his chamber, L. S. 62. Champagne. Very good claret and fine Champaign. Impr. Vane 2. Champaign. See Champagne. Champions. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Stat. 1 22. Chance. If chance, . . . Some kindred spirit shall inquire El. 95 . If chance that e'er some pensive spirit El. Mas. 109. two youths advance, ... to try the glorious chance; Stat. 1 10. Changed. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Changing. Nor changing Skies can hurt, Channel. with copious train its channel fills, Chapel-door. at the chappel-door stand sentry; Chaplet. His head a chaplet bore, Chappel-door. See Chapel-door. Prop? 13. Prop? 94. Tasso 53. L. S. 104. Tasso 16. Character 21 Chloe's Character. Then his character, Phyzzy, C. C. 13. strive to mend A broken character View 4. Characters. The characters of hell to trace. Bar d 52. Chariot. Not I — for a coronet, chariot and sis. C. C. 18. Charitie. See Charity. Charity. Warm Charity, the gen'ral Friend, Adv. 30. Their human passions now no more, Save Charity In st. 50. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shah 2. Charles. But left church and state to Charles Townshend Char. 6. Charm. gems that singly charm the sight, Bent. n. Charms. what charms presume To break the quiet Odin 27. barb'rous rites Of mutter 'd charms, Agr. 63. Has oft the Charms of Constancy confest, Prop. 3 72. •(•With Myra's charms In Episode, Ode 27. Chase. To chase the rolling circle's speed, Eton 29. Nor long endur'd the Chase: Dante 37. Chased. chas'd by Hell-hounds gaunt and bloody Dante 30. Chastening. Dread goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand! Adv. 34. Chastised. Chastised by sabler tints of woe; Vic. 42. Chatillon. And sad Chatillon, Inst. 41. Chaunticleer. chaunticleer so shrill, or ecchoing horn. El. Mas. 19. Chear. See Cheer. Chearful. See Cheerful. Check. Bid I not wish to check this . . . passion, A gr. 106. check their tender Hopes with . . . Fear, E. G. 20. Checked. Checked by the torrent-tide of blood, Owen 27. Cheek. See also Vermeil-cheek. O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, P. P. 40. o'er the cheek of Sorrow throw . . . grace; Vic. 31. Cheer. And lively chear of vigour born; Eton 47. To chear the shiv'ring Natives dull abode. P. P. 57. Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. Relumes her crescent Orb to cheer the dreary Night: Prop? 22. Flash'd to pursue, and chear the eager Cry: Dante 36. Cheerful. Left the . . . precincts of the chearful day, El. 87. Lamps, that shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. chearful Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. Cheesecakes. Better to bottom tarts and cheesecakes nice, Shak. 17. Cherub-choir. A Voice, as of the Cherub-Choir, Bard 131. Chester. The Bishop of Chester, Ext. Keene I. Here lies Edmund Keene Lord Bishop of Chester, Ep. Keene 1 . Here lies Mrs. Keene the she Bishop of Chester, Mrs. Keene I. Chief. But chief, thj Sky-lark warbles high Vic. 13. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. Heal the slow Chief, and send again Prop. 3 82. He their Chief, the foremost He Dante 35. Chiefly. chiefly thee, whose influence breathed Ign. 7. Chiefs. Their feather-cinctur'd Chiefs, P. P. 62. Child. Virtue, his darling Child, Adv. 10. The dauntless Child Stretch'd forth P. P. 87. What dangers Odin^s Child await, Odin 53. There Confusion, Terror's child, Owen 37. A child, the darling of his parent's eyes: Child 2. Childhood. Where once my careless childhood stray'd, Eton 13. To arm the hand of childhood, Agr. 138. Children. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. Bewitch'd the children of the peasants, L. S. 46. My children (they were with me) Dante 42. Children's, then on my Children's Eyes . . . my Sight I fix'd, Dante 52. Chili's. Chili's boundless forests P. P. 59. Chill. the buried Natives chill abode. P. P. MS. 57. Chill Penury repress'd their noble rage, El. 51. Chilled. chill'd by age, Spring 39. Chilling. check their . . . Hopes with chilling Fear, E. G. 20. Chills. that chills the throbbing breast. Bard Lett. 2 130. China. Into the Drawers and China pry, L. S. 65. China's. Where China's gayest art had dy'd Cat 2. Chiron. To Chiron Phcenix owed his long-lost Sight, Prop. 3 83. Chloe's. fa Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, Ode 36. Choak 22 Cleaving Choak. See Choke. Choice. On this congenial spot he fix'd his choice; View 5. Choir. See also Cherub-choir. In silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Bent. I. Rise the rapturous choir among; Vic. 18. Owls would have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. Choke. fTares of Similes choak the roots, Ode 11. Choral. as the choral warblings round him swell, Inst. 24. Christ. The Master of Christ By the rest is enticed; Satire 23 . Christ-cross. ■j-The Pleasantest Person in the Christ-Cross row. Ch. Cr. 44. Christian. They say he's no Christian, C. C. 15. Chronicle. extends Beyond their chronicle — Agr. 137. Chrysalis. f Part in a Chrysalis appear. Ode 42. Chrystalline. See Crystalline. Church. See also Mother-church. But left church and state to Charles Townshend Char. 6. Churchman's. The schoolman's glory, and the churchman's boast. Ign. 32. Church-way. Slow thro' the church-way path El. 114. Churlish. trusts her Blossoms to the churlish Skies. E. G. 8. Cian. my Hoel, died, Great Cian's son: Hoe/ 7. Cieling's. See Ceiling's. Cimbrian. Not Marius* Cimbrian Wreaths would I relate, Prop? 39. Cinctured. See Feather-cinctured. Circle. As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, Stat. 1 26. Collecting all his force, the circle sped; Stat. 1 48. Circled. Not circled with the vengeful Band Adv. 36. Circle's. To chase the rolling circle's speed, Eton 29. Circling. Now in circling troops they meet: P. P. 33. Circumscribe. What fancied Zone can circumscribe the soul, E. G. 73. Circumscribed. nor circumscrib'd alone Their growing virtues, El. 65. bellow in the Circus Agr. 131. Circus. created but to Cities. on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. -j-Remote from cities lives Ch. Cr. 55. Civility. Decorum's turn'd to mere civility; L. S. 137. Clack. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shak. 2. Clad. Not in thy Gorgon terrors clad, Adv. 35. Claim. my Fates that breath they gave shall claim, Prop? 99. Clamber. And o'er the bed and tester clamber, L. S. 64. Clare. and princely Clare, Inst. 42. The Master of Clare Hits them all to a hair; Satire 21. Claret. Very good claret and fine Champaign. Impr. Vane 2. Clarion. The cock's shrill clarion, El. 19. Clash. I heard the dreadful Clash of Bars, Dante 51. Clashed. And, clash'd, rebellows with the din of war. Stat. 1 31. Clattering. Blade with clattering buckler meet, F. S. 23. Claudius. Enshrined Claudius, with the pitied ghosts Agr. 175. Claw. A whisker first and then a claw, Cat 20. Claws. And calm'd the terrors of his claws in gold. Stat. 2 27. Clay. They breathe a soul to animate thy clay. Bard 122. th' inferior laws that rule our clay: E. G. 80. Clean. The times are alter'd quite and clean! L. S. 136. Now clean, now hideous, mellow now, now gruff, Par. on Ep. I. Clear. Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. This pencil . . . , whose colours clear P. P. 89. the . . . cloud That hangs on thy clear brow. Agr. 194. She eyes the clear chrystalline well, Vic. 55. Cleave. Who foremost now delight to cleave Eton 25, Cleaves. and cleaves the solid ground. Stat. 1 52. Cleaving. The ponderous mass sinks in the cleaving ground, Sta>? 16. Clews 23 Combine Clews. +A11 with fantastic clews, fantastic clothes, Ch. Cr. 17. Cliffs. See also Mountain-cliffs. Till down the eastern cliffs afar P. P. 52. On yonder cliffs, ... I see them sit, Bard 44. Climb. No children . . . [shall] climb his knees El. 24. Clime. Facing to the northern clime, ... he traced Odin 21. irto shine Thro' every . . . undiscover'd clime. Inst. 17. Climes. In climes beyond the solar road, P. P. 54. in Climes, where Winter holds his Reign, E. G. 5. To different Climes seem different Souls assign'd ? E. G. 39. sultry climes, that spread E. G. 100. Cloathed. See Clothed. Cloathing. See Clothing. Cloisters. In cloisters dim, far from the haunts of Folly, Inst. 33. Close. Close by the regal chair Bard 80. Keep the tissue close and strong. F. S. 16. Now my weary lips I close; Odin 57, 71. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. she seem to close Her languid Lids, Prop? 17. Closed. Closed his eyes in endless night. P. P. 102. Closet. The Muses, . . . Convey'd him ... To a small closet £• 5. 72. Steal to his closet at the hour of prayer; Shak. 14. Closing. pious drops the closing eye requires; El. 90. fls to tear the closing wound. Rond. 32. Clothed. With necks in thunder cloath'd, P. P. 106. These miserable Limbs with Flesh you cloath'd; Dante 67. Clothes. +A11 with fantastic clews, fantastic clothes, Ch. Cr. 17. Clothing. Each pannel in achievements cloathing, L. S. 6. Clottered. Lips, which on the clotter'd Locks ... he wiped, Dante 2. Cloud. yon sanguine cloud, .' . . has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 135. leaning from her golden cloud The venerable Marg'ret see! Ins'- 65. the tim'rous cloud That hangs on thy . . . brow. Agr. 193. Scythia breath'd the living Cloud of War; E. G. 47. Clouds. In yon bright clouds, Bard MS. 103. Quench'd in dark clouds of slumber lie P. P. 23. Clouds of carnage blot the sun. F. S. 50. It towers to cut the clouds; Stat. 1 49. Cloud-topped. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bard 34. Cloudy. the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop. 2 25. Clouet. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. Clues. See Clews. Coal-black. saddled strait his coal-black steed; Odin 2. Coan. If the thin Coan Web her Shape reveal, Prop. 3 9. Coarse. See also Corse. Coarse panegyricks would but teaze her. L. S. 34. Coast. thy sea-encircled coast. P. P. 82. blue-eyed Myriads from the Baltic coast. E.G. si- Coat. Her coat, She saw; Cat 10. Cobbled. cobbled in one's grave. Shak. 20. Cobham. But Cobham had the polish given L. S. 31. Cock's. The cock's shrill clarion, El. 19. Cold. Cold is Cadwallo's tongue, Bard 29. soothe the dull cold ear of death ? El. 44. With damp, cold touch forbid it to aspire, Ign. 21. To censure cold, and negligent of fame, Bent. 10. among their cold Remains Dante 78. fMy cold soil nips the Buds with Snow. Ode 6. j-I told Of Phoebus' heat and Daphne's cold. Ode 24. Collected. The bee's collected treasures sweet, Inst. 62. Collecting. Collecting all his force, the circle sped; Stat. 1 48. Colored. See Many-colored. Coloring. in fancy's airy colouring wrought Bent. 7. Colors. In fortune's varying colours drest: Spring 37. This pencil . . . whose colours clear P. P. 89. What colours paint the vivid arch Prop? 29. Colour. See Color. Comb. Who ne'er shall comb his raven-hair, Odin 66. Combine. The parts combine and harden into Ore: Tasso 62. Combined 24 Conflict Combined. Amazement in his van, with Flight combined, Bard 61 Come. No sense have they of ills to come, Eton 53 never shall Enquirer come To break din 88 Such as . . . Come (sweep) along some winding entry L. 5. 102 She smiled, and bid him come to dinner. L. S. 132 To hail their Fitzroy's festal morning come; Inst. 54 ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baiae. Agr. 159 Come buss me — C. C. 32 ■j-Great D draws near — the .Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. 1 fin Pond you see him come, Ch. Cr. 39 Comes. sorrow never comes too late, Eton 96. The Peeress comes. L. S. 109. Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat. 1 51. Comfort. Approaching Comfort view: Vic. 40. Comfortless. Grim-visag'd, comfortless Despair, Eton 69. Coming. climb his knees the coming kiss to share. El. Mas. 24. Command. drop'd his thirsty lance at thy command. P. P. 19. Th' applause of list'ning senates to command, El. 61. Yielding due reverence to his . . . command: Agr. 4. Command the Winds, and tame the . . . Deep. £.G. 43 . Commanding. See Awe-commanding. Commenced. The Morn had scarce commenc'd, when I awoke: Dante 41. Commend. Commend me to her affability! L. S. 139. Comment. The message needs no comment. Agr. 2. Commission. She 'd issue out her high commission L. S. 51. Commissioned. And when, our flames commission'd to destroy, Prop. 2 11. Common. The common Sun, the air, the skies, Vic. 51. No common helps, no common guide ye need, Tasso 29. Commoner. Speak to a Commoner and Poet! L. 5. 140. Companion. Spite of her frail companion dauntless goes E. G. 76. Companions. Dear lost companions of my tuneful art, Bard 39. Complain. The mopeing owl does to the moon complain El. 10. To warm their little Loves the Birds complain: West 12. Complaint. The fond complaint, my Song, disprove, P. P. 46 . Compressed. By Odin's fierce embrace comprest, Odin 64. Comprest. See Compressed. Comus. Comus, and his midnight crew, Inst. 2. Conan. But none . . . return, Save . . . Conan strong, Hoel 21. Did the sword of Conan mow The crimson har- vest Conan 9. Conan's. Conan's name, my lay, rehearse, Conan 1. Conceal. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop. 3 10. Concealed. Discover'd half, and half conceal'd their way; Tasso 46. Condemned. men, Condemn'd alike to groan, Eton 92. The ghostly Prudes . . . Already had con- demn'd the sinner. L. S. 130. Condemns. Condemns her fickle Sexe's fond Mistake, Prop? 73. Condition. She curtsies, . . . To all the People of condi- tion. L. S. 112. Confess. The stubborn elements confess her sway, E. G. 81. Confessed. all shall be confess'd, Whate'er Agr. 166. Has oft the Charms of Constancy confest, Prop. 3 72. Contest. See Confessed. Confidence. lawless force from confidence will grow E. G. 98. Confine. To Cynthia all my Wishes I confine; Prop. 3 68. Confined. Their lot . . . their crimes confin'd; El. 66. thro' Ages by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop. 2 43. Confines. Beyond the confines of our narrow world : Tasso 34. Confirmed. these, by ties confirm'd, Of old respect Agr. 113. Conflict. Where our Friends the conflict share, F. S. 27. There . . . Conflict fierce, and Ruin wild, Owen 38. Confusion 25 Could Confusion. Confusion on thy banners wait, Bard 2. There Confusion, Terror's child, Owen 37. with dire confusion hurl'd, Prop. 2 27. Congenial. On this congenial spot he fix'd his choice; View 5. Congregated, the seven Sisters' congregated fires, Prop. 2 35. Conjurer. He ne'er was for a conj'rer taken. L. S. 128. Connected. Words ... by no meaning connected! Am. Lines 6. Conquering. Her conqu'ring destiny fulfilling, L. S. 26. Conqueror. Mighty Conqueror, Bard MS. 63. Conquest's. Tho' fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing Bardy Conscious. Her conscious tail her joy declar'd; Cat 7. The struggling pangs of conscious truth El. 69. the soul, Who conscious of the source E. G. 74. These conscious shame withheld, Stat. 1 25. Consecrate. Half of thy heart we consecrate. Bardyy. Thee too the Muse should consecrate to Fame, Prop. 3 53. Consecrated. in these consecrated bowers, Inst. 7. Consort's. Revere his Consort's faith, Bard 89. Conspired. Than Pow'r and Genius e'er conspir'd to bless. El. Mas. 76. Conspiring. conspiring in the diamond's blaze Bent. 21. Constancy. Has oft the Charms of Constancy confest, Prop. 3 72. Constitution. A broken character and constitution. View 4. Constraint. hours, that bring constraint Eton 33. Construed. For Anguish, which they construed Hunger; Dante 64. Consulate. to soar High as the consulate, Agr. 43. Consuming. See Slow-consuming. Contemplation. By Night and lonely Contemplation led El. Mas. 79. by lonely contemplation led, El. 95. groves, That contemplation loves, Inst. 28. Contemplation's. To Contemplation's sober eye Such is the race of Man : Spring 3 1 . Control. frantic Passions hear thy soft controul. P. P. 16. what seasons can control, . . . the soul, E. G. 72. How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop. 2 37. let her ever my Desires control, Prop. 3 76. Conveyed. Convey 'd him underneath their hoops L. S. 71. Conway's. o'er old Conway's foaming flood, Bar d 16. Cool. Cool Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. Fields, that cool Ilissus laves, P. P. 68. the cool sequester 'd vale of life El. 75. reflection Pours its cool dictates Agr. 83. The cool injurious eye of frozen kindness. Agr. 162. With eyes of flame, and cool undaunted breast, Williams 9. Cooling. •j-Purling streams and cooling breezes Ode 20. Copies. Copies them in all things; Satire 18. Copious. Whate'er with copious train its channel fills, Tasso 53. And many a copious Narrative you'll see Prop. 3 29. "("Copious numbers, swelling grain; Ode 8. Corbulo. Under the warlike Corbulo, -Agr. 112. Cords. Shafts . . . Shoot the trembling cords along. F. S. 14. Cormorants. Here sea-gulls scream, and cormorants rejoice, View 7. Coronet. My Lady . . . Swore by her coronet L. S. 50. Not I — for a coronet, chariot and six. C. C. 18. Corse. Till he on Hoder's corse shall smile Odin 69. may my pale Coarse be borne. Prop. 3 78. Costly. And paint the margin of the costly stream, Tasso 64. Couch. Low on his funeral couch he lies! Bard 64. Couched. "To arms!" cried Mortimer, and couch'd his quiv'ring lance. Bard 14. Could. Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it. L. S. 16. And all that Groom could [might, MS.] urge against him. L. S. 116. we could not have beguil'd . . . the . . . sight Agr. 190. love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. could they catch his strength, Bent. 13. Could love, and could hate, Char. 3. Could'st 26 Cries Yet Nature could not [cannot, MS.] furnish out the feast, View II. He eat a fat goose, and could not digest her. Ep. Keene 2. The Melian's Hurt Machaon could repair, Prop. 3 81. The fourth, what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante 81. •(•But their love could not be strong. Rond. 16. Could'st. oh Earth! could'st thou not gape Dante 71. Counsels. Carry to him thy timid counsels. Agr. 87. Count. Know, thou seest In me Count Ugolino, Dante 13. Country. who o'er thy country hangs The scourge of Heav'n. Bard 59. Imp . . . Who prowl'd the country L. S. 45. Country-farmer. veil'd their weapons ... In pity to the country- farmer. L. S. 40. Country's. Ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bard 42. Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. El. 60. Course. Years of havock urge their destined course, Bard 85. Thy steady course of honour keep, Inst. 91. His . . . Sons with nearer Course surrounds E. G. 24. See, in their course, each transitory thought Bent. 5. As the whirlwind in its course; Conan 6. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat? 10. a River ... all further course withstood; Tasso 8. His course he turn'd, and thus relieved their care: Tasso 26. The birth of rivers riseing to their course, Tasso 52. Courser's. Thy passing Courser's slacken'd Speed restrain; Prop? 102. Coursers. Two Coursers of ethereal race, P. P. 105. Court. The Court was sate, L. S. 97. court the times With shows Agr. 101. With a lick of court white-wash, and pious grimace, C. C. 2. Courtly. with courtly tongue refin'd, Profane Inst. 80. Covers. Horror covers all the heath, F. S. 49. And mimic desolation covers all. View 16. Coward. coward Vice, that revels in her chains. P. P. 80. Cows. Dried up the cows, and lam'd the deer, L. S. 47. Craggy. Brave Urien sleeps upon his craggy bed: Bard 31. ambition from her craggy seat Agr. 51. The eyeless Cyclops heav'd the craggy rock; Stat? 19. Cranny. they explore, Each creek and cranny L. S. 62. Crash. Hauberk crash, and helmet ring. F. S. 24. Crassus. Redeem, what Crassus lost, Crazed. craz'd with care, or cross'd in Creased. he might lie, . . . creased, . Prop? 54. love. El. 108. . in a folio. L. S. 68. Created. created but to stare, Agr. 130. Creation. shake her own creajtion Agr. 91. could they catch . . . His quick creation, Bent. 14. Creek. they explore, Each creek and cranny L. S. 62. Creep. they that creep, and they that fly, Spring 33. In lingering Lab'rinths creep, P. P. 70. Creeping. Forth from their gloomy mansions creeping L. S. 98. nor creeping Gain, Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 9. Crescent. The uncertain Crescent gleams a sickly light. Tasso 48. with silver light Relumes her crescent Orb Prop? 22. Crest. High he rears his ruby crest. Owen 22. Crested. o'er the crested pride Of the first Edward Bard 9. Crevice. Thro' a small crevice opening, Dante 22. Crew. Comus, and his midnight crew, Inst. 2. Cried. "To arms! " cried Mortimer, Bard 14. Cried the square Hoods in woful fidget L. S. 135. you cried Agr. 68. first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 56. straight Ariseing all they cried, Dante 65. Cries. ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bard 42. from the tomb the voice of Nature cries, El. 91. she cries aloud Inst. 67. If murder cries for murder, blood for blood, Agr. 185. I heard Their doleful Cries; Dante 77. Crimes 27 Daintily Crimes. Their lot . . . their crimes confin'd; El. 66. unavailing horrors, fruitless crimes! Agr. 177. Crimson. Tho' fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing Bard 3. Weave the crimson web of war F. S. 25, 36. The crimson harvest of the foe. Conan 10. Critic's. Much have I borne from canker 'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. Cromwell. Some Cromwell [Casar, Mas.] guiltless of his country's blood. El. 60. Crop, •flf a plenteous Crop arise, Ode 7. Cross. See Christ-cross. Crossed. or cross'd in hopeless love. El. 108. Crowd. How vain the ardour of the Crowd, Spring 18. unborn Ages, crowd not on my soul! Bar d 108. fame Has spread among the crowd; Agr. 168. Far below, the crowd. Vic. 57. Suspends the crowd with expectation Stat. 1 44. Crowd's. the madding crowd's ignoble strife, El. 73. Crown. towers, That crown the watry glade, Eton 2. Isles, that crown th' Egaean deep, P. P. 67. Reft of a crown, he yet may share Bard 79. The rival of her crown and of her woes, Inst. 44. science crown my Age, Prop. 2 52. Crowned. See High - crowned, Rosy- crowned. Cruel. Nor cruel Tom, . . . heard. Cat 35. Oh! thou art cruel, Dante 45. fBut if my Myra cruel be Ode 29. Cruelty. froze them up with deadly cruelty. Agr. 183. Crush. not fall alone; but crush his pride, Agr. 186. Cry. With screaming Horror's funeral cry, Adv. 39. and Birds of boding cry, P. P. 50. Mad Sedition's cry profane, Inst. 5. chea r the eager cry : Dante 3 6. Crystalline. She eyes the clear chrystalline well, Vic. 55. Cuckoo's. Responsive to the cuckow's note, Spring 6. Cuckow's. See Cuckoo's. Culprit. The Court was sate, the Culprit there, L. S. 97. Cunning. So cunning was the Apparatus, L. S. 85. Cup. See also Teacup. From the golden cup they drink Hoel 16. Cupboard. Each hole and cupboard they explore, L. S. 61. Curbed. Has curb'd the fury of his car, P. P. 18. Cure. And find a Cure for every 111, Prop. 3 80. Curfew. The Curfew [Curfcu, Dods., Pern.] tolls the Knell of parting day, El. 1. Curls. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? 11. Current. Some lightly o'er the current skim, Spring 28. the genial current of the soul. El. 52. Curse. From Cambria's curse, from Cambria's tears! Bard 8. Curtsies. She curtsies, as she takes her chair, L. S. 1 1 1. Customed. I [we, Mas.] miss'd him on the custom'd hill, El. 109. rever'd With custom'd awe, the daughter, Agr. 118. Cut. And Glyn cut Phizzes, Com. Lines 3. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat. 1 40. It towers to cut the clouds; Stat. 1 49. Cyclops. The eyeless Cyclops heav'd the craggy rock; Stat? 19. Cymbals. the nations with officious fear Their cymbals toss, Stat. 1 57. Cynthia. Oft woo'd the gleam of Cynthia silver-bright Inst. 32. Wars hand to hand with Cynthia let me wage. Prop? 4. From Cynthia all that in my numbers shines; Prop? 3. To Cynthia all my Wishes I confine; Prop? 68. Cytherea. Loves are seen On Cytherea's day P. P. 29. D. tGreat D Jraws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. I. •j-The Dowager grows a perfect double D. Ch. Cr. 4. Daily. rolling, side by 6ide, Their dull, but daily round. Vic. 63. Daintily. +Hcr daughters deck'd most daintily I see, Ch. Cr.-!,. Dalliance Dalliance. The silken son of dalliance, Dames. gorgeous Dames, and Statesmen old 28 Day Agr. 98. . appear. Bard 113. High Dames of honour once, L. S. 107. High potentates, and dames of royal birth, Inst. 37. Damp. With damp, cold touch forbid it to aspire, Ign. 21. Dance. their airy dance They leave, Spring 39. Thee the voice, the dance, obey, P. P. 25. New-born flocks, in rustic dance, Vic. 9. I 'd in the ring knit hands, and joyn the Muses' dance. Prop? 6. Danced. The Seal, and Maces, danc'd before him. L. 5. 12. Danger. Spite of danger he shall live. F. S. 35. your servant's fears, who sees the danger Agr. 24. dost thou talk to me ... of danger, Agr. 27. the time To shrink from danger; Agr. 48. Dangerous. grasp the dangerous honour. Agr. 53. wish to check this dangerous passion, Agr. 106. huddle up in fogs the dang'rous fire. Ign. 22. foremost in the dangerous paths of fame, Williams 1. Dangers. What dangers Odin's Child await, Odin 53. To tempt the dangers of the doubtful way; Tasso 2. Danubius'. The Po was there to see, Danubius' bed, Tasso 55. Daphne's. ■j-I told Of Phoebus' heat and Daphne's cold. Ode 24. Dare. And unknown regions dare descry: Eton 37. Nor Envy . . . Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 10. Dared. scarcely dar'd ... to soar Agr. 41. Nor envy dar'd to view him with a frown. Williams 4. Dares. Scarce Religion dares supply Her mutter'd Re- quiems, Bard Lett. 1 73. Nor dares . . . Profane thy inborn royalty Inst. 80. Daring. what daring Spirit Wakes thee P. P. 112. Dark. in dark [black, MS.] clouds of slumber P. P. 23. The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean El. 54. road That to the grotto leads, my dark abode." Tasso 38. Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 28. Darkened. Iron-sleet . . . Hurtles in the darken'd air. F. S. 4. . Deserts precipitant Stat} 55. The sun's pale sister, her darken'd sphere: Darkness. Him the Dog of Darkness spied, Odin 5. leaves the world to darkness and to me. El. 4. the native darkness of the sky; Ign. 8. Darling. Virtue, his darling Child, Adv. 10. In thy green lap was Nature's Darling laid, P. P. 84. A child, the darling of his parents' eyes: Child 2. Dart. Sorrow's piercing dart. Eton 70. gems . . . Together dart their intermingled rays, Bent. 23. •{■But when once the potent dart Rond. 29. Dash. Yet 't would dash his joy To hear Agr. 13. Dashing. Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat? 20. Dates. from that auspicious Night Dates the long Iliad Prop? 26. Daughter. Daughter of Jove, relentless Power, Adv. 1. As fits the daughter of Germanicus. Agr. 6. long rever'd . . . the daughter, sister, wife, Agr. 1 1 8. Daughters. •(■Her daughters deck'd most daintily I see, Ch. Cr. 3. Daunt. The trembling family they daunt, L. S. 57. Dauntless. The dauntless Child Stretch'd forth P. P. 87. Low the dauntless Earl is laid, F. S. 41. Dauntless . . . The Dragon-Son of Mona stands; Owen 19. Some village-Hampden . . . with dauntless breast El. 57. With watchful eye and dauntless mien, Inst. 90. dauntless goes O'er Libya's deserts. E. G. 76. David. Why, David lov'd catches, C. C. 24. Dawdling. The Master of Maudlin In the same dirt is dawdling; Satire 8. Dawn. at the peep of dawn El. 98. Oft at the blush of dawn I trod Inst. 30. already 'gan the Dawn To send: Dante 25. Dawned. gospel-light first dawn'd from Bullen's eyes. E. G. 109. e'er the sixth Morn Had dawn'd, Dante 75. Day. the Gay . . . flutter thro' life's little day, Spring 36. The thoughtless day, Eton 48. Days 29 Deep Loves are seen On Cytherea's day P. P. 29. thev first were open'd on the day P. P. MS. 118. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 27. Gone to salute the rising Day. Bard MS. 70. sanguine cloud, . . . has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 136. The Curfew tolls the knell of parting day, El. 1 . Left the . . . precincts of the chearful day, El. 87. And beg'd his aid that dreadful day. L. S. 92. " From yonder realms of empyrean day Inst. 13. Break out, and flash a momentary day, Ign. 20. the rolling Orb, that gives the Day, E. G. 23. the Brood of Winter view A brighter Day, E. G. 55. expire beneath the eye of day? E. G. 67. Hope . . . Gilds with a gleam of distant day. Vic. 36. With double light it beam'd against the day: Stat} 27. The watery glimmerings of a fainter day Tasso 45. Each in his proper Art should waste the Day: Prop? 62. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. That Day, and yet another, mute we sate, Dante 70. yet a fourth Day came Dante 72. Days. Along the lonely vale of days? Clerke 12. Few were the days allotted to his breath; Child 5. Thou envied Honour of thy Poet's Days, Prop? 103. for three days more I grop'd Dante 77. Dazzle. dazzle with a luxury of light. Bent. 24. Dazzled. dazzled with its brightness? Agr. 32. the dazzled sight Of wakeful jealousy. Agr. 191. lessening from the dazzled sight, Melts into air Vic. 15. Dazzling, barons bold With dazzling helm, Bard MS. 112. De. See Nom de Guerre. Dead. He rests among the Dead. Bard 68 The thrilling verse that wakes the Dead : din 24 mindful of th' unhonour'd Dead, El. 93; Mas. 77 in a secret and dead hour of night, Agr. 61 and while they wished him dead, Toph. 3 Deadliest. headed by this The deadliest. Dante 35. Deadly. not the basilisk More deadly to the sight, Agr. 161. froze them up with deadly cruelty. Agr. 183. rode Amain, my deadly Foes! Dante 34. Dear. Dear lost companions of my tuneful art, Bard 39. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bard 40. Dear, as the ruddy drops that warm my heart, Bard\\. A pang, to secret sorrow dear; Clerke 13. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, my dear." C. C. 10. Of the dear Web whole Volumes I indite: Prop? 12. They wept, and first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 55. often calling On their dear names, Dante 80. j-But, my Dear, these Flies, they say, Ode 49. Death. The painful family of Death, Eton 83. Death, sad refuge from the storms of Fate! P. P. 45- Severn shall re-eccho . . . The shrieks of death, Bard 55. Lo ! liberty and death are mine. Bard Lett. 3 142. Sisters, weave the web of death; F. S. 51. Baldens head to death is giv'n. Odin 47. There . . . Despair and honourable Death. Owen 40. the dull cold ear of death? El. 44. the Syllani, doom'd to early death, Agr. 176. in death resign'd, Clerke 7; MS. 9. sleep in peace his night of death. Child 6. The Bitterness of Death, I shall unfold. Dante 20. •{-Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. Debt. How vast the debt of gratitude Agr. 57. Deck. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoe! 14. And the buds that deck the thorn! Song 4. Decked. With . . . shapeless sculpture deck'd [deckt, Mas.], El. 79. Deck'd with no other lustre, Agr. 37. +Her daughters deck'd most daintily I see, Ch. Cr. 3. Deckt. See Decked. Declare. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach declare: P. P. 36. "Lord! sister," says Physic to Law, "I declare, C. C. 5. Declared. Her conscious tail her joy declar'd Cat 7. Declares. a Florentine my Ear, . . . declares thee. Dante 12. Decline. All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, Stat. 1 24. Decorum. Decorum's turn'd to mere civility; L. S. 137. Deeds. Thou the deeds of light shalt know; Odin 39. Force and hardy Deeds of Blood prevail. E. G. 44. Deep. Deep, majestic, smooth, and strong. P. P. 8. Isles, that crown th' Ega:an deep, P. P. 67. Deeper 30 Desire Murmur'd deep a solemn sound: P. P. 76. Thro' the azure deep of air: P. P. 117. Struck the deep sorrows of his lyre. Bard 22. Stamp we our vengeance deep, Bard 96. Deep in the roaring tide he plung'd Bar d 144. Burthens of the angry deep. Owen 18. And gilds the horrors of the deep. Inst. 94. tame th* unwilling Deep. E. G. 43. They perish in the boundless deep. Vic. 60. Where lie th' eternal fountains of the deep, Prop. 2 24. Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. Would'st thou revive the deep Despair, Dante 4. Deeper. Those in the deeper vitals rage: Eton 87. the deeper My guilt, the blacker Agr. 172. Deepest. Or deepest shades, . . . Gilds with a gleam Vic. 34. Deep-toned. 'T was Milton struck the deep-ton'd shell, Inst. 23. Deer. Dried up the cows, and lam'd the deer, L. S. 47. Defects. Exact my own defects to scan, Adv. 47. Defiled. keen Remorse with blood defil'd Eton 78. Deigns. She deigns to hear the savage Youth P. P. 60. De'ira's. Upon De'ira's squadrons hurl'd Hoel 3. Dejected. Sighs sudden and frequent, looks ever dejected — Am. Lines 5. Delaval. Weddell attends your call, and Palgrave proud, and Delaval the loud. Com. Lines 1. Delay. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. Delayed. By sympathetic musings here delayed, El. Mas. no. Delia. — Sure Delia will tell me! Am. Lines 8. Delight. Who foremost now delight to cleave Eton 25. Where willowy Camus lingers with delight! Inst. 29 With grim Delight the Brood of Winter view E. G. 54. Sailors to tell of Winds and Seas delight, Prop? 59- Delphi's. Woods, that wave o'er Delphi's steep, P. P. 66. Delude. Unpeopled monast'ries delude our eyes, View 15. Deluge. the deluge burst, with sweepy sway E. G. 48, Delusive. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. Demand. your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. Demands. Fate demands a nobler head; F. S. 43. Owen's praise demands my song, Owen 1. Demurest. Demurest of the tabby kind, Cat 4. Denying. Her sisters denying, and Jemmy proposing: C. C. 20. Depressed. +Not like yon Dowager deprest with years; Ch. Cr. 6. Deprest. See Depressed. Desart-beach. See Desert-beach. Descant. The Birds in vain their amorous Descant joyn; West 3. Descends. fH mounts to Heaven, and H descends to Hell. Ch. Cr. 24. Descending. See also Late-descending, Swift- descending. Descending slow their glitt'ring skirts unroll? Bard 106. Descent. Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. Describe. Can you do nothing but describe? L. S. 20. Descries. 'T is man alone that Joy descries Vic. 27. Descry. And unknown regions dare descry: Eton 37. thy judging eye, The flow'r unheeded shall descry, Inst. "jz. Desert. each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bar d 23. waste its sweetness on the desert air. El. 56. Desert-beach. the desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F. S. 37. Deserted. this long deserted shade. £/.Mas. 112. Deserts. dauntless goes O'er Libya's deserts E. G. 77. Deserts, vb. The sun's pale sister, . . . Deserts precipitant her darken'd sphere: Stat. 1 55. Design. Without design to hurt the butter, L. S. 123. Designed. thy Sire to send on Earth Virtue, . . . design'd, Adv. 10. Desire. The bloom of young Desire, P. P- 4 1 - A place or a pension he did not desire, Char. 5. Desires 31 Different Desires. Their little wants, their low desires refine, E. G. 82. When, less averse, and yielding to Desires, Prop. 3 21. let her ever my Desires control, Prop. 3 76. Desolation. And mimic desolation covers all. View 16. Despair. Grim-visag'd comfortless Despair, Eton 69. Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: Adv. 40. Be thine Despair, and scept'red Care, Bard 141. There . . . Despair and honourable Death. Owen 40. Would'st thou revive the deep Despair, Dante 4. in four Faces saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 63. Despaired. the champions, . . . the palm despair'd resign; Stat. 1 23. Despairing. Leave your despairing Caradoc to mourn: Bard MS. 102. Despise. What female heart can gold despise? Cat 23. The threats of pain and ruin to despise, El. 62. Destined. Years of havock urge their destined course, Bard 85. Destiny. Their homely joys, and destiny obscure; El. 30. Her conqu'ring destiny fulfilling, L. S. 26. Destroy. Thought would destroy their paradise. Eton 98. And when, our flames commission'd to destroy, Prop? u. Destroyer. The prostrate South to the Destroyer yields E. G. 52. Detain. Me may Castalia's sweet recess detain, Prop. 2 2. Devil. He went, as if the Devil drove him. L. S. 88. Devour. could'st thou not gape Quick to devour me? Dante 72. Devoured. Locks Of th' half devoured Head Dante 3. Devouring. As the flame's devouring force; Conan 5. Dew. scarce religion does supply . . . her holy dew. Bard MS. 74. Dew-bespangled. Morn . . . Waves her dew-bespangled wing, Vic. 2. Dews. Night, and all her sickly dews, P. P. 49. The drenching dews, and driving rain! Odin 33. Brushing . . . the dews away El. 99. dews Lethean through the land dispense Ign. 17. Diadem. Shall raise . . . gem To glitter on the diadem. Inst. 76. Dialogue, fin pretty Dialogue I told Ode 23. Diamond. The diamond there attracts the wondrous sight, Tasso 69. Proud of its diamond dies, Tasso 70. Diamond's. conspiring in the diamond's blaze, Bent. 21. Dictates. Pours its cool dictates in the madding ear Agr. 83. Did. To Him the mighty Mother did unveil P. P. S6. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield, El. 25. How jocund did they drive their team El. 27. Knowledge . . . her ample page, . . . did ne'er unroll; El. 50. Heav'n did a recompence . . . send: El. 122. The powerful pothooks did so move him, L. S. 86. Did I not wish to check this . . . passion, Agr. 106. A place or a pension he did not desire, Char. 5. Did the sword of Conan mow The crimson har- vest Conan 9. Did not Israel filch from the Egyptians of old C. C. 25. He drinks — so did Noah; C. C. 28. a bad face which did sadly molest her. Mrs. Keene 2. That I did trust him, that I was betray 'd Dante 1 6. The fourth, what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante 81. Die. To triumph, and to die, are mine. Bard 142. Lo ! to be free to die, are mine. Bard Lett. 3 142. Where they triumph, where they die. F. S. 28. teach the rustic moralist to die. El. 84. Tell them, tho' 't is an awful thing to die, Stanza I. To die is glorious in the Bed of Love. Prop? 64. the quicker let me die: Prop? 70. •{Twenty more in Embrio dye; Ode 38. Died. Ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bar d 42. By them, my friend, my Hoel, died, Hoel 6. When she died, I can't tell, C. C. 14. and when she frown'd, he died. Prop? 108. my other three before my Eyes Died Dante 76. Dies. Proud of its diamond dies, and luxury of light. Tasso 70. Difference. f And seems small difference the sounds between; Ch. Cr. 46. Different. The different doom our Fates assign. Bard 140. A different Object do these Eyes require: West 6. To different Climes seem different Souls assign'd? E. G. 39. fwhile different far, Rests in Retirement, Ch. Cr. 53. Difficult 32 Distant Difficult. Vast, oh my friends, and difficult the toil Tasso 27. Digest. He eat a fat goose, and could not digest her. Ep. Keene 2. Dim. In cloisters dim, far from the haunts of Folly, Inst. 33. Dimly. deepest shades, that dimly lower Vic . 34. Din. Heard ye the din of battle bray, ZfarJ 83. Hoarse he bays with hideous din, Odin 9. There the press, and there the din; Owen 24. He heard the distant din of war. L. S. 76. And, clash'd, rebellows with the din of war, Stat. 1 31. Dinner. She smiled, and bid him come to dinner. L. S. 132. When you rise from your Dinner as light as before, Couplet 1. Dipped. Shafts for shuttles, dipt in gore, F. S. 13. Dipt. See Dipped. Dire. How flames perhaps, with dire confusion hurl'd, Prop. 2 27. From his dire Food the griesly Fellon raised Dante 1. Direful. with direful Hand Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 27. Dirges. with dirges due in sad array El. 1 1 3 . Dirt. The Master of Maudlin In the same dirt is dawdling; Satire 8. Disapprove. Nor thou my gentle Calling disapprove, Prop? 63. Disc. Young Pterelas . . . drew, Labouring, the disc, Stat. 1 6. Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Stat. 1 39. Third in the labours of the disc come on, Stat. 2 1. Disclose. Disclose the long-expecting flowers, Spring 3. No farther seek his merits to disclose, El. 125. Th' unthought event disclose a whiter meaning. Agr. 71. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop? 10. Discovered. Discover'd half, and half conceal'd their way; Tasso 46. Disdain. Some bold adventurers disdain Eton 35. Disdainful. Disdainful Anger, pallid Fear, Eton 63. Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile El. 3 1 . Disdains. The torrent-stream his ancient bounds disdains, Tasso 9. Disease. Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: Adv. 40. Disease, and Sorrow's weeping train, P. P. 44. Disgrace. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Stat. 1 23. Dismay. the sounds, that . . . scatter'd wild dismay, Bard 10. Dismiss. but first dismiss your fears; Tasso 36. Dismissed. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. Disorder. The Poet felt a strange disorder: L. S. 82. Disparted. When mountain-high the waves disparted rise; Tasso 40. Dispel. Dispel, my fair, with smiles, the tim'rous cloud Agr. 193. Dispense. dews Lethean through the land dispense Ign. 17. Disperse. Light they disperse, and with them go Adv. 21. Display. No painted plumage to display: Spring 47. Ambition . . . Display the radiant prize, Agr 52. A milder Warfare I in Verse display; Prop? 61. Displease. the Master of Jesus Does hugely displease us; Satire 6. Disporting. Disporting on thy margent green Eton 23. Disprove. The fond complaint, my Song, disprove, P. P. 46. Disproved. The bard, . . . Had . . . Disprov'd the argu- ments of Squib, L. S. 115. Distance. haply eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 39. And to small distance threw, Stat. 1 6. Distant. Ye distant spires, Eton 1. Yet shall he mount, and keep his distant way P. P. 121. distant warblings lessen on my ear, Bard 133. drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds. El. 8. He heard the distant din of war. L. S. 76. on frail floats to distant cities ride E. G. 106. Gilds with a gleam of distant day. Vic. 36. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. To seek your Hero in a distant soil! Tasso 28. Distilled 33 Down Distilled. from his jaws, till'd: Foam and human gore dis- own 8. Diverted. jThey 're all diverted into H and B. Ch. Cr. 14. Divine. Oh! Lyre divine, P. P. 112. In the midst a Form divine! Bard 115. No boding Maid of skill divine Art thou, Odin 84. There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. tenacious of thy right divine, Ign. 15. * raise the mortal to a height divine. E. G. 83. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop? 58. Diviner. Is that diviner inspiration giv'n, Bent. 18. Divinity. Divinity heard, between waking and dozing, C. C. 19. Do. See also Don't. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. They do not sleep. Zfanf 43. Can you do nothing but describe? L. S. 20. why do I waste the fruitless hours Agr. 154. A different Object do these Eyes require: West 6. — he swears — so do I : C. C. 28. In brief whate'er she do, or say, or look, Prop? 27. Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly? Dante 56. Does. scarce religion does [dares, Lett. 1 ] supply Her mutter'd requiems, Bard MS. 73 The mopeing owl does to the moon complain EL 10 Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59 the Master of Jesus Does hugely displease us; Satire 6 For thee does Powell squeeze, Com. Lines 2 Why does yon Orb, . . . Obscure his radiance Prop? 33 ■fQueer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52 Doff. The Audience . . . doff their hats L. S. no Dog. Him the Dog of Darkness spied, Odin 5. The triple dog that scares the shadowy kind, Prop? 44. Dog's-ears. creased, like dogs-ears, in a folio. L. S. 68. Dogs-ears. See Dog's-ears. Doleful. I heard Their doleful Cries; Dante 77. Dolphin. No Dolphin came, Cat 34. Domain. desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F. S. 38. Dominion. Sailing with supreme dominion P. P. 116. Done. The work is done. Bard 100. Sisters, cease, the work is done. F. S. 52. Tell me what is done below, Odin 40. we hied, our Labours done, El. Mas. 118. Dons. The Master of St. John's Like the rest of the Dons. Satire 34. Don't. "I don't know," says Law, C. C. ii. Doom. regardless of their doom Eton 51. Stamp we our vengeance deep, and ratify his doom. Bard 96. The different doom our Fates assign. Bard 140. Weaving many a Soldier's doom, F. 5 7. In H oder's hand the Heroe's doom : Odin 55. the silent Tenour of thy Doom. EL Mas. 88. Doomed. the Syllani, doom'd to early death, Agr. 176. Door. See also Chapel-door. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. But that they left the door a-jarr, L. S 74. From her loved Door Prop? 78. Doors. -|-Open the Joors of the withJrawing-room; Ch. Cr. 2. Dost. who . . . Dost . . . their artless tale relate; El. 94; Mas. 78. dost thou talk to me ... of danger, Agr. 27. successful dost thou still oppose Ign. 13. Or thou dost mourn to think, Dante 46. Double. With double light it beam'd against the day : Stat. 1 27. -j-The Dowager grows a perfect double D. Ch. Cr. 4. Doublet. See Satin-doublet. Doubt. Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road Tasso 37. Doubtful. To tempt the dangers of the doubtful way ; Tasso 2. Doubts. Cease, my doubts, my fears to move, Song n. Dove-like. Was fashion'd fair in meek and dove-like guise; Shak. 10. Dowager. j-The Dowager grows a perfect double D. Ch. Cr. 4. ■j-Not like yon Dowager deprest with years; Ch. Cr. 6. Down. Now rowling down the steep amain, P. P. 10. Till down the eastern cliffs afar P. P. 52. down the steep of Snowdon's shaggy side Bard II. Down the yawning steep he rode, Odin 3. And strok'd down her band — C. C. 22. Never hang down your head, C. C. 31. Downward 34 Drop Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat. 1 51. And down the steep he led Tasso 43. I swallow'd down My struggling Sorrow, Dante 68. +slow down the Silver stream. Ch. Cr. 57. Downward. Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road Tasso 37. Dozing. Divinity heard, between waking and dozing, C. C. 19. Dragon-son. The Dragon-Son of Mona stands; Owen 20. Drags. Who . . . drags me from the realms of night? Odin 30. Draw. draw his frailties from their dread abode, El. 126 ; Mas. 150. draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop? 105. Drawers. Into the Drawers and China pry, L. S. 65. Drawing-room. visages . . . that garnish'd The drawing-room L. S. 108. j"Q draws her train along the Drawing-room, Ch. Cr. 50. Drawn. See also Long-drawn. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat. 1 54. Draws. draws his humid train of mud: Ign. 4. mends the Plan their Fancy draws, E. G. 32. tGreat D Jraws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. 1. •j-Q draws her train along the Drawing-room, Ch. Cr. 50. Dread. Dread goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand ! Adv. 34. Thrice pronounc'd, in accents dread, Odin 23. draw his frailties from their dread abode, El. 126. Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59. And mariners, though shipwreck'd, dread [fear, Nich.] to land. View 8. yet the dread path once trod, Stanza 2. Dreaded. This mighty emperor, this dreaded hero, Agr. 93. Dreadful. in dreadful harmony they join, Bard 47. And beg'd his aid that dreadful day. L. S. 92. bade the Magi call the dreadful powers, Agr. 64. so 't be strange, and dreadful. — Sorceries, Agr. 171. Th' iEmonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, Stat. 1 58. I heard the dreadful Clash of Bars, Dante 51. Dreads. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop. 2 31. Dream. Each dream, in fancy's airy colouring. Bent. 7. Or are our fears th' enthusiast's empty dream, Prop? 48. Dreaming. . dreaming Sloth of pallid hue, Inst. 4. avaunt, Drear. steep . . That leads to Hela's drear abode. Odin 4. Dreary. He gives to range the dreary sky: P. P. 51. On dreary Arvon's shore they lie, Bard 35. Relumes her crescent Orb to cheer the dreary Night: Prop? 22. Drenching. The drenching dews, and driving rain! Odin 33. Dress. In gorgeous phrase ... To dress thy plea, Agr. 150. Dressed. In fortune's varying colours drest: Spring 37. Truth severe, by fairy Fiction drest. Bard 127. Drest for whom yon golden bed. din 42. In glitt'ring arms and glory drest, Owen 21. •{Prince, in pompous Purple drest, Ch. Cr. 35. Drest. See Dressed. Drew. At Aix, his voluntary sword he drew, Williams 5. Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Stat. 1 5. Dried. Dried up the cows, and lam'd the deer, L. S. 47. My love . . . Dried the soft springs of pity Agr. 182. Drink. flowers, . . . Drink life and fragrance P. P. 6. 'Tis the drink of Balder bold: Odin 46. From the golden cup they drink Hoel 16. Drinking. They say he's no Christian, loves drinking and whoring, C. C. 15. Drinks. He drinks — so did Noah; C. C. 28. Drive. How jocund did they drive their team afield ! El. 27. The dusky people drive before the gale; E. G. 105. Or drive the infernal Vulture Prop? 90. Driving. The drenching dews, and driving rain! Odin 33. Droning. Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, El. 7. Drooping. The Herd stood drooping by: Vic. 24. Drop. while o'er the Place You drop the Tear, Prop? 106. Dropped 35 Earl Dropped. And drop'd his thirsty lance P. P. 19. a tear . . . would have dropp'd, Agr. 11. Dropping. Pity, dropping soft the sadly-pleasing tear. Adv. 32. Drops. Dear, as the ruddy drops that warm my heart, Bard 4 1 . pious drops the closing eye requires; El. 90. Drowns. The . . . tide, that drowns her lessening lands, E.G. 61. Drowsier. to wake pretensions Drowsier than theirs, Agr. 104. Drowsy. drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds: El. 8. Dryden's. where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. Dryden's harmony submit to mine. Bent. 16. Duchess. Great D <fraws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch.Cr. 1. Ductile. In ductile Lines of Foolery: Ode 40. Due. with dirges due [meet, Mas.] in sad array El. 113. And doff their hats with due submission: L. S. 1 10. Yielding due reverence to his . . . command: Agr. 4. Due sacrifice perform'd with barb'rous rites Agr. 62. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. Dull. To chear the shiv'ring Natives dull [chill, MS.] abode. P. P. 57. soothe the dull cold ear of death? El. 44. rolling, side by side, Their dull, but daily round. Vic. 63. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. Dumb. to dumb Forgetfulness a prey, El. 85. Dusky. Their feather-cinctur'd Chiefs, and dusky Loves. P. P. 62. the loom, Where the dusky warp we strain, F. S. 6. The dusky people drive before the gale; E. G. 105. Have ye seen the dusky boar, Caradoc I. As when athwart the dusky woods by night Tasso 47. Dust. their . . . dance They leave, in dust to rest. Spring 40. The dust of the prophetic Maid. Odin 20. Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust, £/.43- Genius of old Rome Shall from the dust Agr. 142. And now in dust the polish'd ball he roll'd, Stat. 1 41. Dutchess. See Duchess. Duty. cast me forth in duty to their lord. Agr. 157. Dwell. within whose sacred cell . . . virtues lov'd to dwell. Clerke 4. ■(-But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Dwindled. ■(•Elizabeths all dwindled into Betties; Ch. Cr. 12. Dye. See Die. Dyed. See Gore-dyed. Dying. Ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bard 42. ■j-E enters next, and with her Eve appears, Ch. Cr. 5. •(in vain you think to find them under E, Ch. Cr. 13. Each. To each his suff'rings: Eton 91. Where each old poetic Mountain P. P. 73. each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 23. Each a gasping Warriour's head. F. S. 12. thro' each winding vale . . . the notes prolong. F.S.S9- Each her thundering faulchion wield; F. S. 62. Each bestride her sable steed. F. S. 63. Each in his narrow cell for ever laid, El. 15. Each pannel in achievements cloathing, L. S. 6. Each hole and cupboard they explore, L. S. 61. they explore, Each creek and cranny L. S. 62. steep in slumbers each benighted sense? Ign. iS. She bids each slumb'ring energy awake, E. G. 78. See . . . each transitory thought Bent. 5. Each dream, in fancy's airy colouring Bent. 7. His mind each Muse . . . adorn'd Williams 3. Each Grace adorn'd his frame, Williams 3. Old, and abandon'd by each venal friend, View I. Firmly he plants each knee, Stat. 1 47. Each in his proper Art should waste the Day: Prop? 62. Eager. Eager to taste the honied spring, Spring 26. The words too eager to unriddle, L. S. 81. Flash'd to pursue, and chear the eager Cry: Dante 36. Eagle. That the Theban Eagle bear P. P. 115. The famish'd Eagle screams, Bard 38. Ear. distant warblings lessen on my ear, Bard 133. the dull cold ear of death? El. 44. Bursts on my ear th' indignant lay: Inst. 14. cool dictates in the madding ear -Agr. 83. Knows his soft ear the trumpet's . . . voice, A g r - 95- a Florentine my Ear, . . . declares thee. Dante 11. Earl. Low the dauntless Earl is laid, F. S. 41. Earl Goodwin trembled for his neighbouring sand; View 6. Earliest 36 Egypt Earliest. There scatter'd oft, the earliest of the Year, El. Pem. 117 ; Mas. 137. There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop? 10. Early. the Syllani, doom'd to early death, Agr. 176. Earnest. While some on earnest business bent Eton 31. A grateful Earnest of eternal Peace. El. Mas. 84. Earns. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. Ears. See a/soDog's-ears. Her ears of jet, . . . She saw ; Cat 11. ears to own Her spirit-stirring voice; Agr. 1 23 . These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, West 5. Great things ... in your ears I shall unfold; Tasso 35. Earth. thy Sire to send on earth Virtue, . . . design d, Adv. 9. The groaning earth beneath him shakes, din 14. Virgins . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 76. rests his head upon the lap of Earth El. 117. Shall raise from earth the latent gem Inst. 75. the spirit of Britannicus Yet walks on earth: Agr. 15. The riches of the earth, Agr. 78. sickly Plants betray a niggard Earth, E.G.i. Imbibes a flavour of its parent earth, E. G. 85. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop. 2 30. oh Earth! could'st thou not gape Dante 71. Earth's. Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. Earth's monster-brood stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop. 2 41. Ease. At ease reclin'd in rustic state Spring 17. nurs'd in ease And pleasure's flow'ry lap? Agr. 98. measured Laws and philosophic Ease E. G. 40. fWhat Ease and Elegance her person grace, Ch. Cr. 7. East. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Eastern. Till down the eastern cliffs afar P- P. 52. Right against the eastern gate, Odin 17. Easy. The thoughtless day, the easy night, Eton 48. she wins her easy way: P. P. 39- could they catch ... his easy grace, Bent. 13. She tunes my easy Rhime, Prop. 3 6. Eat. 'Tis a sign you have eat just enough Couplet 2. He eat a fat goose, Ep. Keene 2. Ebon. Lethargic nods upon her ebon throne. Ign. 24. Echo. See Re-echo. Echoes. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. Echoing. thro' each echoing vale F. S. Whar. 59. shore Echoing to the battle's roar. Owen 26. the echoing [ecchoing, Mas.] horn, El. 19. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat. 2 17. Ecstasy, warbles high His trembling thrilling ecstasy; Vic. 14. Upon the seraph-wings of Extasy, P. P. 96. wak'd to extasy the living lyre. El. 48. riveted His eyes in fearful extasy: Agr. 170. Ecstatic. drink Nectar ... Or the grape's extatic juice. Hoel 18. Eden. A Voice, . . . Gales from blooming Eden bear; Bard 132. Edileship. eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 40. Edmund. Here lies Edmund Keene Lord Bishop of Chester, Ep. Keene 1. Edward. o'er the crested pride Of the first Edward Bard 10. Edward, lo! . . . Half of thy heart we conse- crate. Bard 97. Great Edward, with the lilies on his brow 7ns;. 39. Edward's. The winding-sheet of Edward's race. Bard 50. E'en. See also Even. E'en from the tomb the voice of Nature El. 91. E'en in our Ashes live their wonted Fires El. 92. Tell them, . . . T was e'en to thee; Stanza 2. e'en Magic here must fail, Prop. 3 85. +Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. E'er. all that wealth e'er gave, El. 34. Than Pow'r and Genius e'er conspir'd to bless. El. Mas. 76. who . . . This . . . being e'er resign 'd, El. 86. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form E. G. 26. Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop. 1 I. e'er the sixth Morn Had dawn'd, Dante 74. Efface. The energy of Pope they might efface, Bent. 15. Egaean. Isles, that crown the Egaean deep, P. P. 67. Eggs. And suck'd the eggs, and kill'd the pheasants. L. S. 48. Egypt. the Masians too, and those of Egypt, Agr. 1 1 5. broods o'er Egypt with his wat'ry wings, E. G. 103. Egyptians 37 Encounter Egyptians. Did not Israel filch from the Egyptians of old C. C. 25. Eight. Eight times emerging from the flood Cat 31. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 108. Eighth's. ■j-Henry the Eighth's most monstrous majesty, Ch. Cr. 22. Eirin. Long his loss shall Eirin weep, F. S. 45 This the force of Eirin hiding, O'xtn 1 1 Either. And either Henry there, Inst. 45 with nearer Course surrounds To either Pole, E. G. 25 The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41 either Hand I gnaw'd For Anguish, Dante 63 Elegance. ■(■What Ease and Elegance her person grace, Ch. Cr. 7. Elegy. The place of fame and elegy [epitaph, MS.] supply : El. 82. ■f-I tell her so in Elegy. Ode 30. Elements. The stubborn elements confess her sway, E. G.Si. Elf. Never hang down your head, you poor penitent elf, C.C. 31. Elizabeth. •(■Then one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. Elizabeths. ■{•Elizabeths all dwindled into Betties; Ch. Cr 12. Elms. Beneath those rugged elms, El. 13 Eloquence. gorgeous phrase of labour'd eloquence Agr. 149. Else. No Phoebus else, no other Muse I know, Prop? 5 Elude. By Fraud elude, by Force repel the Foe, E. G. 35. And struggles to elude my longing Eyes, Prop? 24. Elusive. To chase the hoop's elusive speed Eton MS. 29. beguil'd With more elusive speed the . . . sight Agr. 191. Then grasp'd its weight, elusive of his hold; Stat. 1 42. 'T is hard th' elusive Symptoms to explore: Prop? 95. 'Em. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. He Perchance may heed 'em: Agr. 88. And shake *em at the name of liberty, Agr. 132. I heard 'em wail for Bread. Dante 45. too soon they had aroused 'em Dante 48. I saw 'em fall; Dante 76. fStill to ripen 'em is wanted; Ode 4. Embrace. By Odin^s fierce embrace comprest, Odin 64. weeping I forsook thy fond embrace. Ign. 12. Embrio. See Embryo. Embrued. The hungry Pack their sharp-set Fangs embrued. Dante 40. Embryo. -(•Twenty more in Embrio dye; Ode 38. Embryon. And embryon metals undigested glow, Tasso 58. Emerald. Emerald eyes, She saw: Cat 11. Here the soft emerald smiles Tasso 67. Emerging. Eight times emerging from the flood Cat 31. Emits. Emits the mass, a prelude of his might; Stat. 1 46. Emmanuel. But the Master of Emmanuel Follows them like a spaniel; Satire 25. Emperor. This mighty emperor, this dreaded hero, Agr. 93. Empire. the rod of empire El. 47. Shew'd him where empire tower 'd, Agr. 46. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. Empires. Her native plains, and empires once her own. E. G. 63. Employed. The Huntingdons . . . employ'd the power of Fairy hands L. S. 4. Employment. Her household cares, a woman's best employ- ment. Agr. 8. Empty. empty shade Of long-forgotten liberty: Agr. 43. Or are our fears th' enthusiast's empty dream, Prop? 48. Empyrean. From yonder realms of empyrean day Inst. 13. Emulate. that to avoid, and this to emulate. Stat? 5. Enamelling. •(•Vainly enamelling the Green. Ode 18. Enchanting. Sovereign of the willing soul, . . . Enchanting shell! P. P. 15. Enchantress. Me from myself the soft Enchantress stole; Prop? 75. Encircled. See Sea-encircled. Encounter. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop. 3 51. Encroaching 38 Erected Encroaching. Th' encroaching tide, that drowns her . . . lands, E. G. 61. End. they that fly, Shall end where they began. Spring 34. envy oft thy happy grandsire's end. Bard MS. 76. Endear. mutual Wishes, mutual Woes endear E. G. 36. Endless. Closed his eyes in endless night. P. P. 102. headlong ... he plung'd [sunk, Lett. 2 ] to endless night. Bard 144. anxious Cares and endless Wishes El. Mas. 86. Endured. Nor long endur'd the Chase: Dante 37. Energy. She bids each slumb'ring energy awake, E. G. 78. The energy of Pope they might efface, Bent. 15. Enervate. But nor Callimachus' enervate Strain Prop? 55. Enforce. various tracts enforce a various toil, E. G. 86. Engage. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop. 1 3. These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop. 2 51. England's. Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, L. S. 15. Young Williams fought for England's fair re- nown; Williams 2. Enjoys. Th' ^Emonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, Stat. 1 58. Enormous. All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, Stat. 1 24. Enough. Give ample room, and verge enough Bard 51. Enough for me: With joy I see Bard it,<). Enough for me, with joy I see Bard Lett. 1 , Lett. 2 139. A House there is, (and that 's enough) L. S. 21. Sour visages, enough to scare ye, L. S. 106. Enough for me, Bent. 25. 'T is a sign you have eat just enough Couplet 2. Enquire. Some kindred Spirit shall enquire thy Fate; El. Pem. 96 Enquirer. never shall Enquirer come To break Odin 88 Enquiry. vain tho' kind enquiry El. Mas. ill Ensanguined. Wading through th' ensanguin'd field, F. S. 30 And there the ensanguined Wave of Sicily, Prop. 3 44 Enshrined. Enshrined Claudius, with the pitied ghosts Ensigns. with ensigns wide unfurl'd, She rode Ign. 27. Entered. But bounce into the parlour enter'd. L. S. 56. Enters. fE enters next, and with her Eve appears, Ch. Cr. 5. Enthral. The captive linnet which enthral? Eton 27. Enthusiast's. Or are our fears th' enthusiast's empty dream, Prop. 2 48. Enticed. The Master of Christ By the rest is enticed; Satire 24. Entrails. 'T is of human entrails made F. S. 10. Entrance. such as mought entrance find within Dante 60. Entry. Such as . . . Come (sweep) along 6ome winding entry L. S. 102. Envied. the envied [coming, Mas.] kiss to share. El. 24. Oh, might that envied Happiness be mine! Prop? 67. Thou envied Honour of thy Poet's Days, Prop? 103. Envious. While to retain the envious Lawn she tries, Prop? 23. Envy. Envy wan, and faded Care, Eton 68. envy oft thy happy grandsire's end. Bard MS. 76. Nor Envy base, nor creeping Gain, Inst. 9. Nor envy dar'd to view him with a frown. Williams 4. Ephyre. Of Pisa one, and one from Ephyre; Stat. 1 12. Episode. ■(•with Myra's charms In Episode, Ode 28. Epitaph. The Place of Fame and Epitaph supply; £/.Pem. 82; Mas. 98. Equal. With equal power resume that gift, Agr. 90. If equal Justice . . . Smile not indulgent E.G. 15. with fleet and equal Speed Dante 31. Ere. See also E'er. Ere the ruddy sun be set, F.S.il. ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baiae. Agr. 159. ere it precipitates its fall; Stat? 15. Ere the spring he would return — * Song 2. Erected. frail memorial still erected nigh, El. 78. Ermine 39 Expecting Ermine. Mv Lady . . . Swore by her coronet and ermine, L. S. 50. Errand. your errand is perform'd, Agr. I. nor on what Errand Sent hither: Dante 10. Escaped. And scarce Ulysses 'scap'd his giant arm. Stat? 23. Essence. Fix'd by his touch a lasting essence take; Bent. 6. Esther. Tho' wiser than Nestor And fairer than Esther, Ext. Kcene 3. fQueen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. Esthers, f No more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch. Cr. 11. Eternal. A grateful Earnest of eternal Peace. El. Mas. 84. That first, eternal, universal Cause; Prop? 18. Where lie th' eternal fountains of the deep, Prop? 24. Eternity. Lubbers, That to eternity would sing, L. S. 143. Ethereal. Two Coursers of ethereal race, P. P. 105- Etough. Thus Etough look'd; Tcph. 1. Euphrates'. Euphrates' font, and Nile's mysterious head. Tasso 56. European. European Freedom still withstands E. G. 60. Eve. |E enters next, and with her Eve appears, Ch. Cr. 5. Even. See also E'en. Nor even thy virtues, Tyrant, shall avail Bard 6. ev'n these bones from insult to protect El. 77. Ev'n when its will seem'd wrote Agr. 70. Even in the servile senate, Agr. 123. lamps, that shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. Evening. busy housewife ply her evening care: El. 22. Evening-prey. That, . . . expects his evening-prey, Bard 76. Evening-star. tBright beaming, as the Evening-star, her face; Ch. Cr. 8. Event. Th' unthought event disclose a whiter meaning Agr. 71. Th' Event presages, and explores the Cause. E. G. 33. Ever. See also E'er. Each in his narrow cell for ever laid, El. 15. The rude Forefathers . . . For ever sleep: El. Mas. 17. Thus ever grave and undisturbed reflection Agr. 82. ye ever gloomy bowers, Ye gothic fanes, Ign. 1. Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. For ever gone — yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. Sighs sudden and frequent, looks ever dejected — Am. Lines 5. Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop? 40. let her ever my Desires control, Prop? 76. Ever-faithful. weave thy ever-faithful Name. Prop? 54. Everlasting. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3. Ever-melting. Whence the soft Strain and ever-melting Verse? Prop? 2. Ever-new. Theirs . . . invention ever-new, Eton 46. Every. She mew'd to every watry God, Cat 32. a voice in every wind, Eton 39. every labouring sinew strains, Eton 86. Ev'ry shade and hallow'd Fountain P. P. 75. Lord of every regal art, Owen 7. ev'ry fierce tumultuous Passion El. Fr. 82. to shine Thro' every unborn age, Inst. 17. languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E. G. 45. Till time shall every grief remove, Clerke 1 5. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoel 13. Brac'd all his nerves, and every sinew strung; Stat? 7. And find a Cure for every 111, Evil. in Greece's evil hour, Exact. Exact my own defects to scan, Exalt. Exalt the brave, and idolize Success; El Mas. 74. Excess. blasted with excess of light, P. P. 101. Exclude. Rich windows that exclude the light, L. S. 7. Excursion. Fearless in long excursion loves to glide, Tasso 21. Exercise. The pond'rous brass in exercise he bore; Stat? 37. Expand. ■(■Expand their wings of flimzcy Gold. Ode 48. Expanse. th' expanse below . . . survey, Eton 6. Expectation. On expectation's strongest wing to soar Agr. 42. Suspends the crowd with expectation warm; Stat. 1 44. Expected. See Long-expected. Expecting. See Long-expecting. Prop? 80. P. P. 11- Adv. 47. Expects 40 Eyesight Expects. That, . . . expects his evening-prey, Bard 76. Experienced. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat. 1 34. Expire. warblings . . . That lost in long futurity expire. Bard 134. in my Breast the imperfect Joys expire. West 8. As Lamps, . . . Fade and expire E. G. 67. Expired. imploreing In vain my Help, expir"d : Dante 74. Expiring. Your helpless, old, expiring master view ! Bard MS. 72. Explore. Hark, his hands the lyre explore! P. P. 107. shall explore, Thy once loved haunt, El. Mas. III. Each hole and cupboard they explore, L. S. 61. the nations . . . Their cymbals toss, and sound- ing brass explore; Stat. 57. 'T is hard th' elusive Symptoms to explore : Prop? 95. Explores. Th' Event presages, and explores the Cause. E.G. ii. Exquisitely. Why does yon Orb, so exquisitely bright, Prop? 33. Extasy. See Ecstasy. Extatic. See Ecstatic. Extend. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. Extends. but when, extends Beyond their chronicle — Agr. 137. Exterior. How rude so e'er th' 1 exterior Form E. G. 26. Extinct. The gen'rous spark extinct revive, Adv. 45. Eye. To Contemplation's sober eye Spring 31. hard Unkindness' alter'd eye, Eton 76. With leaden eye, that loves the ground, Adv. 28. lie . . . light 'nings of his eye. P. P. 24. No pitying heart, no eye, afford A tear Bard 65. Her eye proclaims her of the Briton-Line; Bard 116. Rapture , . . Waves in the eye of Heav'n Bard 124. . Marking with indignant eye Owen 35. pious drops the closing eye requires; El 90. Whom meaner Beauties eye askance, L. S. 27. thy judging eye, The flow'r unheeded shall descry, Inst. 71. With watchful eye and dauntless mien. Inst. 90. you spied a tear stand in her eye, Agr. 10. Oped his young eye to bear . . . greatness; Agr. 45. the eye of Rome, And the Praetorian camp Agr. 116. Let majesty . . . lighten from thy eye: Agr. 146. cool injurious eye of frozen kindness. Agr. 162. yielding modesty, And oft reverted eye, Agr. 198. expire beneath the eye of day? E. G. 67. Then, with a tempest whirl, and wary eye, Stat? 8. Then with unrelenting Eye Dante 82. Eye-balls. Where his glowing eye-balls turn, Owen 31. Eyed. See also Blue-eyed, Bright-eyed, Soft- eyed. haply eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 39. Eyeless. The eyeless Cyclops heav'd the craggy rock; •tat. 19. Cat 11. Eyes. emerald eyes : She saw; Presumptuous Maid ! with eyes intent Cat Whar. 25. Not all that tempts your wand'ring eyes Cat 40. Closed his eyes in endless night. P. P. 102. Yet oft before his infant eyes P. P. 118. Before his visionary eyes P- P. MS. 118. With haggard eyes the Poet stood; Bard 18. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bard 40. They melt, they vanish from my eyes. Bar d 104. Eyes that glow, and fangs, that grin; Odin 10. Till full before his fearless eyes Odin 15. Knowledge to their eyes her ample page El. 49. read their hist'ry in a nation's eyes, El. 64. With whistful eyes pursue the setting sun. El. Mas. 120. To celebrate her eyes, her air — L. S. 33. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. riveted His eyes in fearful extasy: Agr. 170. A different Object do these Eyes require: West 6. gospel-light first dawn'd from Bullen's eyes. E. G. 109. descries With forward and reverted eyes. Vic. 28. She eyes the clear chrystalline well, Vic. 55. A child, the darling of his parents' eyes: Child 2. With eyes of flame, and cool undaunted breast, Williams 9. — and his eyes are so lewd! C. C. 8. By residence, by marriage, and sore eyes ? Shaft. 12. Unpeopled monast'ries delude our eyes, View 15. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat. 1 34. before the warriors' eyes ... the waves dis- parted rise; Tasso 39. And struggles to elude my longing Eyes, Prop? 24. then on my Children's Eyes ... my Sight I fix'd, Dante 52. my other three before my Eyes Died Dante 75. Eyesight. for then Hunger had reft my Eye-sight Dante 79. 41 Fame fF follows fast the fair — Ch. Cr. 15. Fable. The power of Magick was no fable. L. S. 78. Fabled. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop? 39. Fabric. Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 94. the human fabric from the birth Imbibes E. G. 84. How flames . . . Shall sink this beauteous fabric of the world ; Prop? 28. Face. The fair round face, Cat 8. did unveil Her aweful face: P. P. 87. Her lyon-port, her awe-commanding face, Bard 117. The ghostly Prudes with bagged face L. S. 129. face the rigour Of bleak Germania's snows. Agr. 109. equal Justice with unclouded Face E. G. 15. where the face of nature laughs around, E. G. 70. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. 1. She had a bad face Mrs. Keene 2. How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop. 2 23. ■(■Bright beaming, as the Evening-star, her face; Ch. Cr. 8. jhe perks upon your face, Ch. Cr. 33. Faces. in four Faces saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 62. Facing. Facing to the northern clime, ... he traced Odin 21. Fade. As Lamps, . . . Fade and expire E. G. 67. Faded. Envy wan, and faded Care, Eton 68. with Flight combined, And sorrow's faded form, Bard 62. Fades. Now fades the glimmering landscape El. 5. Fail. resentment cannot fail to raise Agr. 25. e'en Magic here must fail, Prop? 85. Faint. fThen one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. Fainter. The watery glimmerings of a fainter day Tasso 45. Fair. Fair Venus' train appear, Spring 2. The fair round face, Cat 8. Fair laughs the Morn, Bard 71. Fair Science frown'd not on his . . . birth, El. 119. With shows of fair obeisance; Agr. 102. fair befall the victors. Agr. 153. Dispel, my fair, with smiles, the tim'rous cloud Agr. 193. Young \\ illiams fought for England's fair renown; Williams 2. our master's temper natural Was fashion'd fair Shak. 10. Love and the Fair were Prop? 107. ■(•Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. fF follows fast the fair — Ch. Cr. 15. Fairer. A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child 4. Tho' wiser than Nestor And fairer than Esther, Ext. Keene 3. Fairest. Owen . . . Fairest flower of Roderic's stem, Owen 3. Fairy. Truth severe, by fairy Fiction [Fairy-Fiction, Lett. 1 ] drest. Bard 127. The Huntingdons . . . Employ'd the power of Fairy hands L. S. 4. Faith. Revere his Consort's faith, Bard 89. Affection warm, and faith sincere, . . . were there. Clerke 5. Faithful. See also Ever-faithfuL Fierce War, and faithful Love, Bard 126. faithful to her wonted Fires. El. Dods. 92. the Mistress of my faithful breast, Prop? 71. Falchion. See Faulchion. Fall. Sweet music's melting fall, Inst. 63. Let me not fall alone ; but crush Agr. 186. And I, . . . That live to . . . sing their fall. Hoel 24. Turrets and arches nodding to their fall, View 14. ere it precipitates its fall Stat? 15. Or if I fall the Victim Prop? 77. I saw 'em fall; Dante 76. Fallen. See New-fallen. False. one false step is ne'er retriev'd, Cat 38. Falsehood. The stings of Falshood those shall try, Eton 75. Fame. Revere his Consort's faith, his Father's fame, Bard 89. The place of fame and elegy supply: El. 82. to Fortune and to Fame unknown. El. 118. Fame, in the shape of Mr. Purt, Had told L. 5.41. he liv'd unknown To fame, or fortune: Agr. 39. the frivolous tongue of giddy fame Agr. 167. To censure cold, and negligent of fame, Bent. 10. foremost in the dangerous paths of fame, W illiams I. Thee too the Muse should consecrate to Fame, Prop? 53. Happy the Youth, and not unknown to Fame, Prop? 65. Family 42 Fate Family. The painful family of Death, Eton 83. The trembling family they daunt, L. S. 57. Famine. Fell Thirst and Famine scowl Bard 81. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop? 47. Here Mutina from flames and famine free, Prop? 43. the Tower of Famine hight Dante 24. Famished. The famish'd Eagle screams, Bard 38. Fan. fa Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, or Caelia's Bonnet. Ode 36. Fancied. What fancied Zone can circumscribe the soul, . E.G. n . Fancies. Mutt 'ring his wayward fancies El. 106. Fancy. Gay hope is theirs by fancy fed, Eton 41. Bright-eyed Fancy hov'ring o'er P. P. 108. yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. mends the Plan their Fancy draws, E. G. 32. Fancy's. dream, in fancy's airy colouring wrought Bent. 7. ■(•And variegated Fancy's seen Ode 17. Fanes. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. Ye gothic fanes, and antiquated towers, Ign. 2. Here mouldering fanes and battlements arise, View 13. Fangs. with unrelenting fangs, That tear'st Bard 57. Eyes that glow, and fangs, that grin; Odin 10. The hungry Pack their sharp-set Fangs embrued. Dante 40. Fanned. Tho' fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing Bard 3. Fans. ■j-With Fans and Flounces, Fringe and Furbelows. Ch. Cr. 18. Fantastic. beech That wreathes its old fantastic roots El. 102. fAll with fantastic clews, fantastic clothes, Ch. Cr. 17. Far. Till o'er the eastern cliffs from far P. P. MS. 52. Far from the sun and summer gale, P. P. 83. Beneath the Good how far — but far above the Great. P. P. 123. Far, far aloof th' affrighted ravens sail; Bard 37. Far and wide the notes prolong. F. S, 60. Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife, .E/.73. Imp . . . Who prowled the country far and near, L. S. 45 In cloisters dim, far from the haunts of Folly, Inst. 33 Thus far we're safe. Agr. 188. sees far off with an indignant groan, E. G. 62. Far below, the crowd. Vic. 57. Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. When blazing 'gainst the sun it shines from far, Stat. 1 30. The orb . . . Far overleaps all bound, Stat 2 12. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar. Tasso 6. far less shall be Our Suffering, Dante 65. f while different far, Rests in Retirement, Ch. Cr. «. Farewell. 3 the Woodlark piped her farewell Song, El. Mas. 119. Farmer. See Country-farmer. Farther. No farther seek his merits to disclose, El. 125. Fasces. Submits the fasces of her sway, Inst. 86. Fashion. fSee Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. Fashioned. our master's temper natural Was fashion 'd fair Shak. 10. Fast. Fast by th' umbrageous vale lull'd to repose, Prop? 3. fF follows fast the fair Ch, Cr. 15. Fastening. the dreadful Clash of Bars, And fast'ning Bolts: Dante 52. Fat. For thee fat Nanny sighs, Com. Lines 6. He eat a fat goose, Ep. Keene 2. Fatal. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bardij. House . . . From whence one fatal morning issues L. S. 22. Fate. Malignant Fate sat by, and smil'd Cat 28. The Ministers of human fate, Eton 56. why should they know their fate? Eton 95. sad refuge from the storms of Fate! P. P. 45. Beyond the limits of a vulgar fate, P. P. 122. Secure of Fate, the Poet stood, Bard Lett. 1 18. to sudden fate . . . Half of thy heart we con- secrate. Bard 97. As the paths of fate we tread, F. S. 29. Fate demands a nobler head; F. 5.43. say, . . . Who the Author of his fate. Odin 54. linger in the gloomy Walks of Fate: El. Mas. 80. Some kindred spirit . . . inquire thy fate, El. 96. to know the fate Impending o'er your son: Agr. 65. your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. thro' Ages by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. fir'd by Mnestheus' fate, Stat? 4. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. Fates 43 Feign Nor lofty Carthage struggling with her Fate. Prop? 40. Or if, alas! it be my Fate Prop? 69. Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 28. Fates. The different doom our Fates assign. Bard 140. When then my Fates Prop? 99. Father. , father Thames, Eton 21. The Father of the powerful spell. Odin 12. The bosom of his Father and his God. El. 128. Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly ? Dante 56. Father's. Revere his Consort's faith, his Father's fame, Bard 89. Her infant image . . . Sits smiling on a father's woe: Gierke 10. Fathers. And mitred fathers in long order go: Inst. 38. Faulchion. Each her thundering faulchion wield; F. S. 62. Fault. N t you, ye Proud, impute to These the fault, El. 37. Forgive, ye Proud, th' involuntary Fault, El. Dods., Pem., Eg., Mas. 37. Faults. tBuzzing with all their parent Faults; Ode 46. Favor. in the sunshine Of thy full favour; Agr. 148. I favour her repose. Prop? 18. Favorite. A Fav'rite has no friend ! Cat 36. What favourite has a friend ? Cat Wal., Dods. 36. near his fav'rite tree; El. no. Favour, Favourite. See Favor, Favorite. Fear. Disdainful Anger, pallid Fear, Eton 63. never can he fear a vulgar fate, P. P. MS. 122. Marking . . . Fear to stop, Owen 36. For folks in fear are apt to pray L. S. 90. Nor fear the rocks, nor seek the shore: Inst. 92. school'd by fear To bow the supple knee, Agr. 100. check their . . . Hopes with chilling Fear, E. G. 20. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — I fear — C. C. 9. mariners, though shipwreck'd, fear to land. View Nich. 8. In vain the nations with officious fear Their cym- bals toss, Stat. 1 56. Feared. Whether she fear'd, or wish'd to be pursued. Agr. 199. Fearful. And snatch a fearful joy. Eton 40. riveted His eyes in fearful eitasy: Agr. 170. Fearless. Till full before his fearless eyes Odin 15. Fearless in long excursion loves to glide, Tasso 21. Fears. Of Horrour . . . and thrilling Fears, P. P. 93. To save thy secret soul from nightly fears, Bard -j. Forgive your servant's fears, Agr. 24. Hence rise my fears. Agr. 56. My love, my fears for him, Agr. 181. alas, my fears! Can powers immortal Ign. 25. Cease, my doubts, my fears to move, Song 11. but first dismiss your fears; Tasso 36. Or are our fears th' enthusiast's empty dream, Prop? 48. Sad with the Fears of Sleep, Dante 49. Feast. he yet may share the feast: BardT). Yet Nature could not furnish out the feast, View 11. hasty to renew The hellish Feast, Dante 84. Feasts. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop? 47. Feather-cinctured . Their feather-cinctur'd Chiefs, P. P. 62. Feathered. thy magic lulls the feather'd king P. P. 21. Fed. Gay hope is theirs by fancy fed, Eton 41. With many a foul and midnight murther fed, Bard 88. Feeble. Man's feeble race what Ills await, P. P. 42. Frisking ply their feeble feet; Vic. 10. permit me raise My feeble Voice, Prop? 32. Feed. genial Juice retains Their Roots to feed, E. G. 4. Feel. I feel the gales, Eton 15. What others are, to feel, Adv. 48. Let him feel Before he sees me. Agr. 163. Can powers immortal feel the force of years? Ign. 26. With Sense to feel, with Mem'ry E. G. 30. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop? 45. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame Prop? 53. Feeling. if to some feeling breast Bent. 25. Feels. the fire it feels not. Agr. 84. The Widow feels thee in her aching hip; Com. Lines 5. Feet. The slipp'ry verge her feet beguil'd, Cat 29. glance their many-twinkling feet. P. P. 35. heap'd his master's feet around, Owen 29. Frisking ply their feeble feet; Vic. 10. low as his feet there flows A vestment Tasso 13. When Gaddo, at my Feet out-stretch'd, Dante 73. Feign. And realis'd the beauties which we feign: View 20. Fell 44 Find Fell. Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: Adv. 40. Fell Thirst and Famine scowl Bard 8 1 . Fellow-swains. Ah! say, Fellow-swains, how these symptoms be- fell me? Am. Lines 7. Felon. From his dire Food the griesly Fellon raised Dante I. Felt. The Poet felt a strange disorder: L. S. 82. She felt the wound she left behind, Clerke 8. agony of mind Was felt for him Clerke MS. II. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. ■fThey who just have felt the flame Rond. 21. Female. Thy Joys no glittering female meets, Spring 45. What female heart can gold despise? Cat 23. j-In shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. Fenced. The bard, . . . Had in imagination fenc'd him, L.S. 114. Fertile. Soil, tho' fertile, will not teem in vain, E. G. 6. Festal. rise, To hail their Fitzroy's festal morning Inst. 54. Fester. The Bishop of Chester, ... If you scratch him will fester. Ext. Keene 4. Fetters. My soul in Bacchus' pleasing fetters bound; Prop. 2 8. Few. There sit . . . The few, whom genius gave to shine Inst. 16. Few were the days allotted to his breath; Child 5. resolution To smuggle a few [some, MS.] years, View 3. Fib. with many an artful fib, L. S. 113. Fickle. her fickle Sexe's fond Mistake, Prop. 3 73. ■(•but fickle throw my trains . . . into the Fire: Ode 33. Fiction. Truth severe, by fairy Fiction drest. Bard 127. Fidget. Cried the square Hoods in woful fidget L. S. 135. Field. Wading through th' ensanguin'd field, F. S. 30. Hurry, hurry To the field. F. S. 64. And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. And furthest send its weight athwart the field, Stat. 1 2. With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, Stat. 1 29. Fields. Ah, fields belov'd in vain, Eton 12. Fields, that cool Ilissus laves, P. P. 68. Wide o'er the fields of Glory P. P. 104. The little Tyrant of his fields EL 58. chearful Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. The Fields to all their wonted Tribute bear West II. Her boasted Titles and her golden Fields; E. G. 53. Fiend. so grinned the brawling fiend, To ph. 1. Fierce. Till fierce Hyperion from afar P. P. MS. 51. Fierce War, and faithful Love, Bard 126. By Odins fierce embrace comprest, din 64. There . . . Conflict fierce, and Ruin wild, Owen 38. ev'ry fierce tumultuous Passion El. Mas. 82. The drawing-room of fierce Queen Mary. L. S. 108. fierce resentment cannot fail to raise Agr. 25. Fierce nations own'd her . . . might, Ign. 29. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop? 51. Fiercer. opener skies, and Suns of fiercer flame E. G. 64. Fiery. As the thunder's fiery stroke, Conan 7. Fifty. When he had fifty winters o'er him, L. S. 10. Fight. the long Iliad of the amorous Fight. Prop? 26. the Soldier of the Fight, Prop? 60. Fights. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop} 3. Filch. Did not Israel filch from the Egyptians of old C.C. 25. Filching. And filching and lying, and Newgate-bird tricks; C.C. 17. Filial. Prostrate with filial reverence I Ign. 10. Fill. Poverty, to fill the band, Eton 88. Fill high the sparkling bowl, Bard 77. and fill their verdant Veins. E. G. 4. Filled. his jaws, with carnage fill'd, Odin 7. Fills. Whate'er with copious train its channel fills, Tasso 53. Find. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form we find, E. G. 26. And find a Cure for every 111, Prop? 80. such as mought entrance find within Dante 60. •j-Late to find it: — and, again, Rond.T,, II, 19,27, 35. fin vain you think to find them Ch. Cr. 13. Fine 45 Flash Fine. Very good claret and fine Champaign. Impr. Vane 2. Finished. He finish'd: Then with unrelenting Eye Dante Si. Fire. with a Master's hand, and Prophet's fire, Bard 21. Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. in thy lineaments we trace A Tudor's fire, Inst. 70. bid it fire A thousand haughty hearts, Agr. 16. , glows with the pure Julian fire, Agr. 50. thinks to quench the fire Agr. 84. redmng Phoebus lifts his golden Fire: West 2. huddle up in fogs the dang'rous fire. Jgn. 22. the fire that animates our frame; E. G. 65. Rise, my soul! on wings of fire, Vic. 17. Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Shak. 18. Purg'd by the sword, and purified by fire, View 21. fthrow . . . half an act into the Fire: Ode 34. Fired. By Phlegyas warn'd, and fir'd by Mnestheus' fate, Stat? 4. Fires. this fires the veins, Eton 85. bright track, that fires the western skies, Bard 103. in our Ashes live [glow, Pem., Eg.] their wonted Fires. El. 92. buried ashes glow with social fires. El. Mas. 108. That monthly waning hides her paly fires, Prop? 20. Whence the seven Sisters' congregated fires, Prop? lS . Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop? 40. She half accepts, and half rejects, my Fires, Prop? 22. Firmly. Firmly he plants each knee, Stat. 1 47. First. A whisker first and then a claw, Cat 20. Wbi D first thy Sire to send on earth Virtue . . . design'd Adv. 9. d they first were open'd P. P. MS. 118. gospel-light first dawn'd from Bullen's eyes. E. G. 109. o'er the crested pride Of the first Edward Bard 10. What, in the very first beginning! L. S. 17. The first came cap-a-pee from France L. S. 25. On the first marching L. S. 69. where . . . First the genuine ardour stole. Inst. 22. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; Williams 6. And first to Ascalon their steps they bend, Tasso 3. but first dismiss your fears; Tasso 36. That first, eternal, universal Cause; Prop? 18. They wept, and first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 55. j-First when Pastorals I read, Ode 19. f Whose influence first bid it live. Ode 54. ■j-First to love, — and then to part, Rond. 1. Fish. What Cat's averse to fish? Cat 24. Fit. A sudden fit of ague shook him, L. S. 119. Fits. As fits the daughter of Germanicus. Agr. 6. Fitting. Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Stat. 1 43. Fitzroy's. rise, To hail their Fitzroy's festal morning Inst. 54. Fix. Fix and improve the . . . Arts of Peace :E. G. 41. Fixed. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. transitory thought Fix'd by his touch Bent. 6. On this congenial spot he fix'd his choice; View 5. Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25. Speechless my Sight I fix'd, nor wept, Dante 53. Flagging. With ruffled plumes, and flagging wing: P. P. 22. Flame. and Freedom's holy flame. P. P. 65. incense kindled at the Muse's flame. El. 72. opener skies, and suns of fiercer flame E. G. 64. catch a lustre from his genuine flame. Bent. 12. With eyes of flame, and cool undaunted breast, Williams 9. And rubies flame, with sapphire's heavenly blue, Tasso 68. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame Prop? S3- Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. •(•They who just have felt the flame Bond. 21. Flame's. As the flame's devouring force; Conan 5. Flames. wrapt in flames, . . . Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 93. And when, our flames commission'd to destroy, Prop? 11. How flames . . . Shall sink this beauteous fabric Prop? 27. Here Mutina from flames and famine free, Prop? 43. Flaming. the flaming bounds of Place and Time: P. P. 98. corse . . . Flaming on the fun'ral pile. Odin 70. Flanks. and in their trembling Flanks Dante 39. Flash. Break out, and flash a momentary day, Ign. 20. Flashed 46 Flower Flashed. The foremost He Flash'd to pursue, Dante 36. Flattering. The summer Friend, the flatt'ring Foe; Adv. 22. Flattery. Can . . . Flatt'ry soothe the dull ... ear of death? El. 44. Nor . . . Let painted Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train. Inst. 8. Flattery's. the grateful steam Of flattery's incense, Agr. 35. Flavor. Imbibes a flavour of its parent earth, E. G. 85. Flavour. See Flavor. Flaxen. their flaxen tresses tear, And snowy veils, din 77. Fled. Is the sable Warriour fled? Bard 67. Fleet. with fleet and equal Speed Dante 31. Fleeting. Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? El. 42. Flesh. These miserable Limbs with Flesh you cloath'd ; Dante 67. Flew. Out of the window, whisk, they flew, L. S. 79. From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, Williams 7. Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Stat. 1 39. Flies. happiness too swiftly flies, Eton 97. Sings in its rapid way, and strengthens as it flies; Stat. 1 50. •(■Judgment from the Harvest flies Ode 9. •j-But, my Dear, these Flies, they say, Ode 49. Flight. Amazement in his van, with Flight combined, Bard 61. Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, El. 7. Flimsy. ■(•Expand their wings of flimzey Gold. Ode 48. Flimzey. See Flimsy. Fling. Their gather'd fragrance fling. Spring 10. Flings. she ... no venal incense flings; Inst. 79. From his . . . bosom life and verdure flings E. G. 102. And sing with what a careless Grace she flings Prop. 3 15. Flinty. a niggard Earth, Whose flinty Bosom E. G. 2. With . . . plough to quell the flinty ground, E. G. 91. Flirt. They flirt, they sing, they laugh, they tattle, L. S. 58. Float. Eager to . . . float amid the liquid noon: Spring 27. arms sublime, that float upon the air, P. P. 38. snowy veils, that float in air. Odin 78. Floats. on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. Whate'er . . . Floats into Lakes, Tasso 54. Flocks. New-born flocks . . . ply . . . feeble feet; Fie. 9. The Shepherd of his flocks, Prop. 3 60. Flood. Eight times emerging from the flood, Cat 31. o'er old Conway's foaming flood, Bar d 16. To-morrow he repairs the golden flood, Bard 137. Backward Meinai rolls his flood; Owen 28. rushy Camus' slowly-winding flood Ign. 3. the torrent's swift-descending flood, E. G. 92. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Of many a flood they view'd the secret source, Tasso 51. Floods. And winter binds the floods in icy chains, Tasso 18. Floor. they . . . Run hurry-skurry round the floor, L. S. 63. Florentine. but a Florentine my Ear, . . . declares thee. Dante II. Flounces. •j-With Fans and Flounces, Fringe and Furbelows. Ch. Cr. 18. Flourish. ■j-Bids the poetick Spirit flourish; Ode 14. Flow. the tear it fore'd to flow; Eton 77. a thousand rills ... as they flow. P. P. 6. Their raptures now that wildly flow, No . . . morrow know; Vic. 25. Further they pass, where ripening minerals flow, Tasso 57. She . . . gives the Lay to flow. Prop? 6. Flowed. Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand; Stat. 1 38. Flower. Owen . . . Fairest flower of Roderic's stem, Owen 3. many a flower is born to blush unseen, El. 55. thy judging eye, The flow'r unheeded shall de- scry, Inst. 72. A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child 4. Ah! what means yon violet flower! Song 3. Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band, Stat. 1 16. Floweret Footsteps Floweret. See Flowret. Flowers. The long-expecting flowers, Spring 3. China's ... art had dy'd The azure flowers, Car 3. whose flowers among Wanders the . . . Thames along Eton 8. The laughing flowers, that round them blow, P. P. 5. Flatt'ry hide her serpent-train in flowers. Inst. S. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop? 9. fBut, tho' Flowers his ardour raise, Ode 15. Flowery. nurs'd in ease And pleasure's flow'ry lap? Agr. 99. Flown. On hasty wings thy youth is flown; Spring 48. Flowret. The meanest flowret of the vale, Vic. 49. Flows. Near the source whence Pleasure flows; Vic. 54. low as his feet there flows A vestment Tasso 13. Where Aganippe warbles as it flows; Prop. 2 4. Flung. and scornful flung th' unheeded weight Stat. 1 21. His vigorous arm he tried before he flung, Stat. 2 6. Flushed. Flush'd with mirth and hope they burn: Hoe] 19. Flutter. The Gay . . . flutter thro' life's little day, Spring 36. Fly. what art thou? A solitary fly! Springy. Fly, vb. Whisp'ring pleasure as they fly, Spring 8. they that creep, and they that fly, Spring 33. the slumbers . . . That fly Eton 50. fly Self -pleasing Folly's idle brood, Adv. 17. Let us go, and let us fly, F. S. 26. Marking . . . shame to fly, Owen 36. fly These hated walls that seem to mock Agr. 155. They follow Pleasure, and they fly from Pain; E. G.31. Must sick'ning virtue fly the tainted ground? E.G. 71. Saw the snowy whirlwind fly; Vic. 22. Flying. Hurls at their flying rear, his . . . shafts of war, P. P. MS. 53. Or urge the flying ball? Eton 30. Foam. from his jaws, . . . Foam and human gore dis- till'd: Odin 8. Foaming. o'er old Conway's foaming flood, Bard 16. Foe. What Cat 's a foe to fish ? Cat Dods. 24. The summer Friend, the flatt'ring Foe; Adv. 22. Twined with her blushing foe, Bard 92. By Fraud elude, by Force repel the Foe, E.G. 35. The crimson harvest of the foe. Conan 10. Foes. Thy leaden aegis 'gainst our ancient foes? Ign. 14. Foes to the gentler genius of the plain: E. G. 89. the bull, . . . On surrounding foes advance? Caradoc 3. rode Amain, my deadly Foes! Dante 34. Fogs. huddle up in fogs the dang'rous fire. Ign. 22. Folds. drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds: El. 8. Folio. creased, like dogs-ears, in a folio. L. S. 68. Folks. For folks in fear are apt to pray L. S. 90. Follow. They follow Pleasure, and ... fly from Pain; E.G. 11. fSlow follow all the quality of State, Ch. Cr. 51. Follows. But the Master of Emmanuel Follows them like a spaniel; Satire 26. fF follows fast the fair — Ch. Cr. 15. Folly. 'Tis folly to be wise. Eton 100. In cloisters dim, far from the haunts of Folly, Inst. 33. •(■See Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. Folly's. fly Self-pleasing Folly's idle brood Adv. 18. Fond. The fond complaint, my Song, disprove, P. P. 46. Fond impious Man, think'st thou, Bard 135. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. With fond reluctance, yielding modesty, Agr. 197. weeping I forsook thy fond embrace. Ign. 12. fond Instruction on the growing Powers E. G. 13. Condemns her fickle Sexe's fond Mistake, Prop. 3 73. Font. Euphrates' font, and Nile's mysterious head. Tasso 56. Food. From his dire Food the griesly Fellon raised Dante I. now the Hour Of timely Food approach'd; Dante 50. Foolery, fin ductile Lines of Foolery: Ode 40. Foot. at the foot of yonder nodding beech, El. 101. Footsteps. little Footsteps lightly print the Ground. El. Pern. 120; Mas. 140. With hasty footsteps brush the dews away El. Mas. 115. Foppery 48 Foul Foppery. •j-See Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. For, omitted. Forbad. Their lot forbad: El. 65. Forbad to wade through slaughter El. 67. Forbade. See Forbad. Forbid. With damp, cold touch forbid it to aspire, Ign. 21. Forbids. The Soil, . . . Forbids her Gems to swell, E. G. 7. Force. This the force of Eirin hiding, Owen II. in Armenia quell the Parthian force Agr. in. Can powers immortal feel the force of years? Ign. 26. by Force repel the Foe, E. G. 35. Force and hardy Deeds of Blood E. G. 44. As lawless force from confidence will grow E. G. 98. As the flame's devouring force; Conan 5. Collecting all his force, the circle sped; Stat. 1 48. True to the mighty arm that gave it force, Stat? 11. Swoll'n with new force, Tasso 10. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop. 2 30. Forced. the tear it forc'd to flow; Eton 77. Forefathers. The rude Forefathers of the hamlet El. 16. Forehead. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. Foreknew. what my poor Heart Foresaw, foreknew: Dante 47. Foremost. Who foremost now delight to cleave Eton 25. Foremost . . . The venerable Marg'ret see! Inst. 65. foremost in the dangerous paths of fame, Williams I. He their Chief, the foremost He Dante 35. Foresaw. what my poor Heart Foresaw, foreknew: Dante 47. Forests. Chili's boundless forests P. P. 59- For ever. See Ever. Forgetful. Forgetful of their wintry trance, The Birds . . . greet: Vic. II. Forgetfulness. to dumb Forgetfulness a prey, El. 85. Forgive. Teach me to love and to forgive, Adv. 46. Forgive, ye Proud, th' involuntary Fault, El. Dods., Pem., Eg., Mas. 37. Forgive your servant's fears, Agr. 24. Forgot. The tear forgot Eton 43 . 'Tis like, thou hast forgot, Agr. 33. those of Egypt, Have not forgot your sire: Agr. 116. Forgotten. See Long-forgotten. Forked. taught ... To aim the forked bolt; Agr. 31. Forlorn. nor thus forlorn Leave me unbless'd, Bard 101. woeful-wan, like one forlorn, El. 107. Form. he ... . bad to form her infant mind. Adv. 12. Thy form benign, oh Goddess, wear, Adv. 41. with Flight combined, And sorrow's faded form, Bar d 62. In the midst a Form divine! Bard 115. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form E. G. 26. And blended form, with artful strife, Vic. 43. ■(•Maggots too will form and nourish; Ode 16. ■j-In form of Parrot, Pye, or Popinjay. Ch. Cr. 42. Formed. Transparent birdlime form'd the middle, L. S. 83. Here Holland form'd [took, MS.] the pious reso- lution View 2. form'd of polish'd brass. Slat. 1 8. Forms. Two angel forms were seen to glide Cat 14. shaggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. Such forms, as glitter in the Muse's ray, P.P. 119. Forsook. But soon his rhetorick forsook him, L. S. 117. weeping I forsook thy fond embrace. Ign. 12. Forth. Stretch 'd forth his little arms, P. P. 88. Forth from their gloomy mansions creeping L. S. 98. pacing forth With solemn steps Inst. 35. cast me forth in duty to their lord. Agr. 157. Let him stand forth Stat. 1 3. Phlegyas . . . Call'd forth all the man. Stat. 1 33. Fortune. to Fortune and to Fame unknown. El. 118. he liv'd unknown To fame, or fortune; Agr. 39. He had not the method of making a fortune: Char. 2. From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, Williams 7. Fortune's. In fortune's varying colours drest: Spring 37. Forward. descries With forward and reverted eyes. Vic. 28. Fought. Young Williams fought for England's fair re- nown; Williams 2. Foul. With many a foul and midnight murther fed, Bard 88. Found 49 From Found. Scatter'd oft . . . are Show'rs of Violets found; El. Pem. 11S; Mas. 138. where unwearied sinews must be found E. G. 90. For Ills unseen what Remedy is found? Prop. 3 91. ■fAs H the Hebrew found, Ch. Cr. 25. Fountain. Ev'ry shade and hallow'd Fountain P. P. 75. Fountains. Where lie th' eternal fountains of the deep, Prop? 24. Four. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. Four, not less brave, That in Armenia Agr. 110. in four Faces saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 62. Fourth. yet a fourth Day came Dante 72. The fourth, what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante 81. Foxes. And foxes stunk and litter'd in St. Paul's. View 24. Fragrance. Their gather'd fragrance fling. Spring 10. flowers, . . . Drink life and fragrance P. P. 6. The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 74. the new Fragrance of the breathing Rose, E. G. 56. The sleeping fragrance from the ground; Vic. 6. Frail. Some frail memorial . . . erected nigh, El. 78. Spite of her frail companion dauntless goes E. G. 76. on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. Frailties. draw his frailties from their dread abode, El. 126. his frailties there in trembling hope repose, EL Mas. 15. Frame. the fire that animates our frame; E. G. 65. each Grace adorn'd his frame, Williams 3 ■(■Lightly lambent o'er their frame, Rond. 22. France. She-Wolf of France, . . . That tear'st Bard 57. The first came cap-a-pee from France L. S. 25. Frantic. frantic Passions hear thy 60ft controul. P. P. 16. Fraud. By Fraud elude, by Force repel the Foe. E. G. 35. Free. Lo ! to be free to die, are mine Bard Lett. 3 142. scatter with a free, though frugal, Hand E. G. 17. Here Mutina from flames and famine free, Prop? 43. Freed. Here, freed from pain, . . . lies A child, Child I. Freedom. With Freedom by my side, Inst. 34. How shall the spark . . . Blaze into freedom, Agr. 129. European Freedom still withstands E. G. 60. Freedom's. and Freedom's holy flame. P. P. 65. Frequent. Sighs sudden and frequent, Am. Lines 5. Fresh. As waving fresh their gladsome wing, Eton 17. Freshest. Scatters his freshest, tenderest green. Vic. 8. Frets. Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat. 2 20. Fretted. through the long-drawn isle and fretted vault EL 39. To raise the cieling's fretted height, L. 5. 5. Friend. A Fav'rite has no friend ! Cat 36. The summer Friend, the flatt'ring Foe; Adv. 22. Warm Charity, the gen'ral Friend, Adv. 30. He gain'd from Heav'n ... a friend. EL 124. A friend, a wife, a mother sleeps: Clerke 2. By them, my friend, my Hoel, died, Hoel 6. Old, and abandon'd by each venal friend, View I. While frighted prelates bow'd and called him friend; Toph.z. Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop} 1. Friends. Where our Friends the conflict share, F. S. 27. Sylla has his friends, though school'd Agr. 100. Vast, oh my friends, and difficult the toil Tasso 27. A train of mourning Friends attend his Pall, Prop? 97. Friendship. Where melancholy friendship bends, and weeps. Williams 12. Nor Mungo's, Rigby's, Bradshaw's friendship vain, View 18. Frighted. While frighted prelates bow'd To ph. 2. Fringe. •(•With Fans and Flounces, Fringe and Furbelows. Ch. Cr. 18. Frisking. Frisking light in frolic measures; P. P. 31. Frisking ply their feeble feet; Vic. 10. Frivolous. the frivolous tongue of giddy fame Agr. 167. Frolic. Frisking light in frolic measures; P. P. 31. From, omitted. Front 50 Gales Front. the glittering front of war? Agr. 94. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? n. Fronts. Sublime their starry fronts they rear; Bard 112. Frown. Scared at thy frown terrific, Adv. 17. Nor envy dar'd to view him with a frown. Williams 4. Frowned. and when she frown 'd, he died. Prop? 108. Frowning. now frowning as in Scorn, El. Dods. 105. Frowns. a rock, whose haughty brow Frowns Bard 16. When a boy frowns, Agr. 18. Froze. Penury . . . froze the genial current of the soul. El. 52. froze them up with deadly cruelty. Agr. 183. Frozen. cool injurious eye of frozen kindness. Agr. 162. And sports and wantons o'er the frozen tide. Tasso 22. Frugal. scatter with a free, though frugal, Hand E. G. 17. Fruitful. All that on Granta's fruitful plain . . . bounty pour'd, Inst. 51. The fruitful Muse from that auspicious Night Prop? 25. Fruitless. long pursues, with fruitless yell, The Father Odin 11. why do I waste the fruitless hours Agr. 154. Ye unavailing horrors, fruitless crimes ! Agr. 177. I fruitless mourn to him that cannot hear, West 13. Fulfilling. Her conqu'ring destiny fulfilling, L. S. 26. Full. Full many a sprightly race Eton 22. Till full before his fearless eyes Odin 15. Full many a gem of purest ray serene, El. 53. Full many a flower is born El. 55. Full oft . . . he . . . led the Brawls; L. S. 9. in the sunshine Of thy full favour; Agr. 148. Great things and full of wonder ... I shall un- fold; Tasso 35. Full-grown. A Wolf full-grown; Dante 31. Full-plumed. Full-plumed Fancy hov'ring o'er P. P. MS. 108. Fumbling. From fumbling baronets and poets small, Shak. 6. Fumes. So from our works sublimer fumes shall rise; Shak. 22. Funeral. With screaming Horror's funeral cry, Adv. 39. Low on his [the, MS.] funeral couch he lies! Bar d 64. corse . . . Flaming on the fun'ral pile. Odin 70. And wonder at the sudden Funeral. Prop? 98. Furbelows. fWith Fans and Flounces, Fringe and Furbelows. Ch. Cr. 18. Furnish. Nature could not furnish out the feast, View 11. Furrow. Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke: El. 26. Further. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat. 1 40. a River ... all further course withstood; Tasso 8. Further they pass, Tasso 57. Furthest. And furthest send its weight Stat. 1 2. Fury. These shall the fury Passions tear, Eton 61. Has curb'd the fury of his car, P. P. 18. with fury pale, Bard Lett. 1 17. As on the Rhine, when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. Futurity. warblings . . . That lost in long futurity expire. Bard 134. the dreadful powers, That read futurity, Agr. 65. Gaddo. When Gaddo, at my Feet out-stretch'd, Z)a«7e 73. Gain. nor creeping Gain, Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 9. What the bright reward we gain? Inst. 59. heart . . . Gain the rough heights, Agr. 53. Industry and Gain their Vigils keep, E. G. 42. Gained. He gain'd from Heav'n ... a friend. El. 124. They guard . . . what by strength they gain'd? E. G. 95. 'Gainst. See also Against. 'Gainst graver hours, Eton 33. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. Thy leaden aegis 'gainst our ancient foes? Ign. 14. blazing 'gainst the sun it shines Stat. 1 30. Gale. See also Summer-gale. languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E. G. 45. The dusky people drive before the gale; E. G. 105. The simplest note that swells the gale, Vic. 50. Gales. I feel the gales, Eton 15. A Voice, . . . Gales from blooming Eden bear; Bard 132. Western gales . . . Speak not always winter past. Song 9. Gall 51 Gentle Gall. sweets of kindness . . . Rankle to gall; Agr. 74. But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall Shak. II. Gallant. In gallant trim the gilded Vessel goes; Bard 73. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams 11. Gallery. And from the gallery stand peeping: L. S. 100. Gallia. lilies . . . From haughty Gallia torn, Inst. 40. 'Gan. See also Began, already 'gan the Dawn To send: Dante 25. Gape. oh Earth! could'st thou not gape Dante 71. Gaping. Gor'd with many a gaping wound: F. S. 41. Garb. Wisdom in sable garb array'd Adv. 25. Robed in the sable garb of woe, Bard 17. Garden. To a small closet in the garden. L. S. 72. Garlands. And with her Garlands weave Prop. 3 54. Garnish'd. visages . . . that garnish'd The drawing-room L. S. 107. Gasping. Each a gasping Warriour's head. F. S. 12. Gate. Right against the eastern gate, Odin 17. when at the Gate Below I heard Dante 50. Gates. This can unlock the gates of Joy; P. P. 92. shut the gates of mercy on mankind, El. 68. Gathered. Their gather'd fragrance fling. Spring 10. Gaunt. chas'd by Hell-hounds gaunt and bloody Dante 30. Gave. To thee he gave the heav'nly Birth, Adv. II. all that wealth e'er gave, El. 34. He gave to Mis'ry all he had, El. 123. There sit . . . The few, whom genius gave to shine Inst. 16. To her that gave it being, Agr. 29. the world, you gave him, Agr. 58. True to the mighty arm that gave it force, Stat? 11. my Fates that breath they gave shall claim, Prop? 99. Gave not to know their Sum of Misery, Dante 43. Gay. Alike the Busy and the Gay Spring 35. Gay hope is theirs Eton^i. On her shadow long and gay Lochlin plows Owen 13. Be gay securely; Agr. 192. With native spots and artful labour gay, Stat? 25. Gayest. Where China's gayest art had dy'd Cat 1. Gayly-gilded. Some shew their gayly-gilded trim Spring 29. Gaze. Where Angels tremble, while they gaze, P. P. ICO. In silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Bent. I. Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly? Dante 56. Gazed. The pensive Selima . . . Gazed on the lake Cat 6. Still had she gaz'd; Cat 13. Gazetteer. •(■AH, all, but Grannam Osborne's Gazetteer. Ch. Cr. 20. Gazing. Swift at the word, from out the gazing host, Stat. 1 4. Geese. fHere Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Geira. Gondula, and Geira, spread . . . your shield. F.5.31. Gem. Britain's gem. Owen 4. many a gem of purest ray serene, El. 53. Shall raise from earth the latent gem Inst. 75. Gems. The Soil . . . Forbids her Gems to swell, E. G. 7. meaner gems that . . . charm the sight, Bent. 22. General. Warm Charity, the gen'ral Friend, Adv. 30. nature . . . leads the general song: Vic. 20. Generous. The gen'rous spark extinct revive, Adv. 45. Glory pursue, and generous Shame, P. P. 64. flinty Bosom starves her generous Birth, E. G. 2. Genial. the genial current of the soul. El. 52. Nor genial Warmth, nor genial Juice E. G. 3. f But the genial Hand of Time Ode 3. Genii. The Genii of the stream: Cat 15. Genius. Than Pow'r and Genius e'er conspir'd to bless. El. Mas. 76. There sit . . . The few, whom genius gave to shine Inst. 16. Again the buried Genius of old Rome Agr. 141. Foes to the gentler genius of the plain: E. G. 89. She is my Genius, she inspires the Lines; Prop? 4. Gentle. And to . . . thy gentle hand, Submits the fasces Inst. 86. A moment's patience, gentle Mistress Anne: Shak. 1. Gentler 52 Glide Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop} I. Nor thou my gentle Calling disapprove, Prop? 63. Gentler. Foes to the gentler genius of the plain: E. G. 89. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child $. Gently. Oh, gently on thy Suppliant's head, Adv. 33. Genuine. All hail, ye genuine Kings, Bard no. where . . . First the genuine ardour stole. Inst. 22. catch a lustre from his genuine flame. Bent. 12. Germania's. the rigour Of bleak Germania's snows. Agr. no. Germanicus. As fits the daughter of Germanicus. Agr. 6. Gestures. With gestures quaint, now smiling as in scorn, El. Mas. 125. Ghastly. Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: Adv. 40. Smear'd with gore, and ghastly pale: Bard 36. Ghostly. The ghostly Prudes . . . Already had condemn'd the sinner. L. S. 129. Ghosts. pitied ghosts Of the Syllani, Agr. 175. Giant. A giant Boy shall Rinda bear, Odin MS. 65. And scarce Ulysses 'scaped his giant arm. Stat. 2 23. No Giant Race, no Tumult of the Skies, Prop. 3 35. Giant-brood. Mother of the giant-brood! Odin 86. Giant-oak. each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 23. Giddy. the frivolous tongue of giddy fame Agr. 167. Gift. These were your gift, Agr. 80. With equal power resume that gift, Agr. 90. if you resume your Gift; Dante 66. Gilded. See also Gayly-gilded. In gallant trim the gilded Vessel goes; Bard 73. around thee call The gilded swarm Agr. 147. to his gilded bark With fond reluctance, Agr. 196. Gilds. star . . . gilds the horrors of the deep. Inst. 94. Hope . . . Gilds with a gleam of distant day. Vic. 36. Girt. Girt with many a baron bold Bard III. Give. give to rapture all thy trembling strings. P. P. 1. Give ample room, and verge enough Bard 51. We the reins to slaughter give, F. S. 33 Give anxious Cares and . . . Wishes room; El. Mas. 86 Numbers would give their oaths upon it, L. S. 127 liberal power to give, Agr. 89 Give me to send the laughing bowl around, Prop? 7 And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop? 88 At once give loose to Utterance, and to Tears. Dante 9 fSo I to you this Trifle give, Ode 53 Given. Say, has he giv'n in vain P. P. 48 Baldens head to death is giv'n. Odin 47 But Cobham had the polish given L. S. 31 Sparks of Truth and Happiness has given. E. G. 29 Is that diviner inspiration giv'n, Bent. 18 Gives. He gives to range the dreary sky: P. P. 51 the rolling Orb, that gives the Day, E. G. 23 She . . . gives the Lay to flow. Prop? 6 Glad. While spirits . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 88 Glad I revisit thy neglected reign, Ign. 5 Glade. The . . . beech O'er-canopies the glade; Spring 14. towers, That crown the watry glade. Eton 2. Gladsome. As waving fresh their gladsome wing, Eton 17. Glance. Glance their many-twinkling feet. P. P. 35. a glance from high They send Inst. 19. Glancing. See also Quick-glancing. thunder's fiery stroke, Glancing on the shiver'd oak; Conan 8. Glassy. Who . . . delight to cleave ... thy glassy wave? Eton 26. Gleam. Betray'd a golden gleam. Cat 18. I . . . Oft woo'd the gleam of Cynthia Inst. 32. Hope . . . Gilds with a gleam of distant day. Vic. 36. With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, Stat. 1 29. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. Gleams. The uncertain Crescent gleams a sickly light. Tasso 48. Glebe. Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke: El. 26. Glide. Two angel forms were seen to glide, Cat 14. Fearless in long excursion loves to glide, Tasso 21. Gliding 53 Gods Gliding. In gliding state she wins her easy way: P. P. 39. Glimmering. Now fades the glimmering landscape El. 5. Glimmerings. The watery glimmerings of a fainter day Tasso 45. GUmpse. •j-Then one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. Glisters. Nor all, that glisters, gold. Cat 42. Glitter. Such forms, as glitter in the Muse's ray, P. P. 119. Shall raise . . . gem To glitter on the diadem. Inst. 76. distant cities . . . That rise and glitter E. G. 107. Glittering. Thy Joys no glittering female meets, Spring 45. and glitt'ring shafts of war. P. P. 53. solemn scenes . . . their glitt'ring [golden, MS.] skirts unroll? Bard 106. Glitt'ring lances are the loom, F. S. 5. For whom yon glitt'ring board is spread, Odin 41. In glitt'ring arms and glory drest, Owen 21. Has he beheld the glittering front of war? Agr. 94. in glitt'ring row Thrice two hundred warriors go : Hoel 1 1 . So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat. 1 28. Here gems break through the night with glitt'ring beam, Tasso 63. Gloom. See Twilight-gloom. Gloomy. linger in the gloomy Walks of Fate: El. Mas. 80. Forth from their gloomy mansions creeping L. S. 98. ye ever gloomy bowers, Ye gothic fanes, Ign. 1. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. Glories. To mourn the Glories of his sevenfold Stream, Prop. 3 50. Glorious. For glorious puddings and immortal pies. Shak. 24. two youths advance, ... to try the glorious chance; Stat} 10. To die is glorious in the Bed of Love. Prop? 64. Glory. Awake, my lyre: my glory, wake, P. P. MS. 1. Glory pursue, and generous Shame, P. P. 64. Wide o'er the fields of Glory P. P. 104. Visions of glory, spare my aching sight, Bard 107. In glitt'ring arms and glory drest, Owen 21. The paths of glory lead but to tlte grave. El. 36. The schoolman's glory, and the churchman's boast, Ign. 32. Gloucester. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. Glow. Eyes that glow, and fangs, that grin; Odin 10. in our Ashes glow their wonted Fires. El. Pern., Eg. 92. buried ashes glow with social fires. El. Mas. 108. The hues of Bliss more brightly glow, Fie. 41. And embryon metals undigested glow, Tasso 58. Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop. 2 40. Glowing. Where his glowing eye-balls turn, Owen 31. Glows. The busy murmur glows! Spring 24. Charity, that glows beyond the tomb. Inst. 50. A heart that glows with . . . fire, Agr. 50. the spark . . . that glows within their breasts, Agr. 128. Gnaw. Prostrate warriors gnaw the ground. Owen 30. whom thus I ceaseless gnaw insatiate; Dante 8. Gnawed. either Hand I gnaw'd For Anguish, Dante 63. Gnaws. Jealousy . . . that inly gnaws Eton 67. Go. Light they disperse, and with them go Adv. 21. Let us go, and let us fly, F. S. 26. And mitred fathers in long order go: Inst. 38. Go! you can paint it well Agr. 12. 'T is time to go, the sun is high -Agr. 158. Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 12. Goblet. Mantling in the goblet see The pure bev'rage din 43. God. She mew'd to ev'ry watry God, Cat 32. The bosom of his Father and his God. El. 128. And so God save our noble King, L. S. 141. he believed in a God: Char. 4. — for he talks about God — C. C. 30. And bids the pure in heart behold their God. Stanza 4. Goddess. Dread Goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand! Adv. 34. Thy form benign, oh Goddess, wear, Adv. 41. where'er the Goddess roves, P. P. 63. Goddess! awake, arise! Ign. 25. Goddess'. Before the Goddess* shrine we . . . bend, Prop. 1 2. Godhead. The Godhead would have back'd his quarrel, L. S. 93. Godhead's. So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat. 1 28. Gods. Gods! then was the time To shrink Agr. 47. their Kings, their Gods were roll'd away. E. G. 49. Goes 54 Grannam Goes. In gallant trim the gilded Vessel goes; Bard 73. dauntless goes O'er Libya's deserts E. G. 76. And tastes it as it goes. Vic. 56. Gold. What female heart can gold despise? Cat 23. Nor all, that glisters, gold. Cat 42. O'er it hangs the shield of gold; Odin 45. He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoel 8. Their jewels of silver and jewels of gold ? C. C. 26. And calm'd the terrors of his claws in gold. Stat? 27. ■(•Expand their wings of flimzey Gold. Ode 48. Golden. Betray'd a golden gleam. Cat 18. Thro' verdant vales, and Ceres' golden reign: P. P. 9. Thine too these golden keys, P. P. 91. their golden skirts unroll ? Bard MS. 106. To-morrow he repairs the golden flood, Bard 137- Drest for whom yon golden bed. Odin 42. leaning from her golden cloud The venerable Marg'ret see! Inst. 65. redning Phoebus lifts his golden Fire: West 2. Light golden Showers of Plenty E. G. 18. Her boasted Titles and her golden Fields; E. G. 53. Now the golden Morn aloft Waves . . . wing, Vic. 1. Chains . . . Wreath'd in many a golden link: Hoel 1 5. From the golden cup they drink Hoel 16. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop? 48. Gondula. Gondula, . . . , spread O'er the youthful King your shield. F. S. 31. Gone. Thy spring is gone — Spring 49. Thy son is gone. Bard 68. Gone to salute the rising Morn. Bard 70. He 's gone: and much I hope Agr. 22. Yes, I will be gone, But not to Antium — Agr. 165. For ever gone — yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. Good. leave us leisure to be good. Adv. 20. Beneath the Good how far — P. P. 123. No boding Maid . . . nor Prophetess of good; Odin 85. The grateful memory of the good. Inst. 60. Very good claret and fine Champaign. Impr. Vane 2. •(these Flies . . . can boast of one good Quality; Ode 50. Good-nature. Cobham had . . . tip'd her arrows with good- nature. L. S. 32. Goodwin. Earl Goodwin trembled for his neighbouring sand; View 6. Goose. He eat a fat goose, Ep. Keene 2. Gore. See also Infant-gore. Smear'd with gore, and ghastly pale: Bard 36. Shafts for shuttles, dipt in gore, F. S. 13. from his jaws, . . . Foam and human gore dis- tiH'd. Odin 8. And sad Philippi, red with Roman Gore : Prop? 46. Gored. gor'd with many a gaping wound : F. S. 42. Gore-dyed. the griesly Fellon raised His Gore-dyed Lips, Dante 2. Gorgeous. gorgeous Dames, and Statesmen old . . . appear, Bard 113. In gorgeous phrase of labour'd eloquence Agr. 149. Gorgon. Not in thy Gorgon terrors clad, Adv. 35. Gospel-light. gospel-light first dawn'd from Bullen's eyes. E. G. 109. Gothic. Ye gothic fanes, and antiquated towers, Ign. 2. Grace. See also Virgin-grace. afford A tear to grace his obsequies. Bar d 66. no sign of grace, L. S. 89. My Lady rose, and with a grace — L. S. 131. in thy lineaments we trace ... a Beaufort's grace. Inst. 70. to grace thy youthful brow, The laureate wreath, Inst. 83. could they catch . . . his easy grace, Bent. 13. throw A melancholy grace; Vic. 32. each Grace adorn 'd his frame, Williams 3. And sing with what a careless Grace she flings Prop? 15. fWhat Ease and Elegance her person grace, Ch. Cr. 7. Graced. better scenes . . . had grac'd our view, View Nich. 19. Graces. the Graces homage pay. P. P. 37. Grain. •(Copious numbers, swelling grain; Ode 8. Grandam. High on her car, behold the grandam ride Ign. 36. Grandchildren. Wrinkled beldams Teach it their grandchildren, ■Agr- 135. Grandeur. Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile El. 31. What is grandeur, what is power? Inst. 57. •(■But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Grandsire's. envy oft thy happy grandsire's end. BardMS. 76. Grannam. f All, all, but Grannam Osborne's Gazetteer. Ch. Cr. 20. Granta 55 Gripe Granta. Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 77. Granta 's. All that on Granta's fruitful plain . . . bounty pour'd, Inst. 51. Grape's. drink Nectar ... Or the grape's extatic juice. Hoel 18. Grasp. A heart that . . . will . . . grasp the dangerous honour. Agr. 53. Grasped. Then grasp'd its weight, Stat. 1 42. Grateful. Where grateful science still adores Eton 3. A grateful Earnest of eternal Peace. El. Mas. 84. The grateful memory of the good. Inst. 60. the grateful steam Of flattery's incense, Agr. 34. Gratefully, fgratefully they pay Their little Songs, Ode 51. Gratitude. sweeter yet The still small voice of gratitude. Inst. 64. How vast the debt of gratitude Agr. 57. ties ... Of old respect and gratitude, Agr. 114. The soft Returns of Gratitude E. G. 34. Grave. Hear from the grave, great Taliessin, Bard 121. The paths of glory lead but to the grave. El. 36. save His all from an untimely grave. Clerke MS. 12. Than thus be patch'd and cobbled in one's grave. Shah. 20. Grave, adj. My grave Lord-Keeper led the Brawls; L. S. 11. grave and undisturbed reflection Agr. 82. Graved. the lay, Grav'd [Wrote, Mas.] on the stone El. 116. Graver. 'Gainst graver hours, Eton 33. Grave's. And all the scenes, that hurt the grave's repose, Prop? 49. Grease. Grease his best pen, Shak. 16. Great. How indigent the great! Spring 20. How little are the great ! Spring Dods. 20. but far above the Great. P. P. 123. Hear from the grave, great Taliessin, Bard 121. Great Edward, with the lilies on his brow Inst. 39. benefits too great To be repaid, Agr. 74. My great revenge shall rise; Agr. 121. No very great wit, Char. 4. my Hoel, died, Great Cian's son: Hoel 7. Great things and full of wonder ... I shall unfold; Tasso^^. \ Here should Augustus great in Arms appear, Prop? 41. |Great D Jraws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. 1. fThus great R reigns in town, Ch. Cr. 53. Great-house. to the Great-house He went, L. S. 87. Greatness. to bear the blaze of greatness; Agr. 45. Greece's. in Greece's evil hour, P. P. 77, Green. See also Velvet-green. Disporting on thy margent green Eton 23. In thy green lap was Nature's Darling laid, P. P. 84. His bushy beard, and shoe-strings green, L. S. 13. chearful Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. Scatters his freshest, tenderest green. Vic. 8. Idle notes! untimely green! Song-j. The theatre's green height and woody wall Tremble Stat? 14. f Vainly enamelling the Green. Ode 18. Greenwood. the Greenwood Side along, El. Mas. 117. Greet. The Birds his presence greet: Vic. 12. Grew. She swept, she hiss'd, she ripen'd and grew rough, Par. on Ep. 2. Grief. In buskin'd measures move Pale Grief, Bard 129. See a kindred Grief pursue; Vic. 38. Till time shall every grief remove, Clerke 15. Griesly. See Grisly. Grim. That, hush'd in grim repose, expects his evening- prey. Bard 76. Grim Towers of Julius, Bard MS. 87. With grim Delight the Brood of Winter view E. G. 54. That grim and antique Tower admitted Dante 23. Grimace. With a lick of court white-wash, and pious grimace, C. C. 2. ■(•ponders, with profound grimace, Ch. Cr. 34. Grim-visaged. Grim-visag'd comfortless Despair, Eton 69. Grin. Eyes that glow, and fangs, that grin; Odin 10. Grinned. so grinned the brawling fiend, Toph. 1. Grinning. And grinning Infamy. Eton 74. Gripe. Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Stat. 1 43 . Grisly 56 Had Grisly. A griesly troop are seen, Eton 82. a griesly band, I see them sit, Bard 44. See the griesly texture grow! F. S. 9. Our mother-church, . . . Blusk'd as she bless'd her griesly proselyte; Toph. 6. From his dire Food the griesly Fellon raised Dante I. Groan. Condemn'd alike to groan, Eton 92. sees far off with an indignant groan, E. G. 62. Groaning. The groaning earth beneath him shakes, Odin 14. Groom. And all that Groom could urge against him. L. S. 116. Groped. for three days more I grop'd Dante 77. Grotto. road That to the grotto leads, Tasso 38. Ground. With leaden eye, that loves the ground, Adv. 28. Soon a King shall bite the ground. F. S. 44. Till from out the hollow ground Odin 25. Prostrate warriors gnaw the ground. Owen 30. Accents whisp'ring from the Ground, EL Mas. 83. Footsteps lightly print the Ground. El. Pem. 120 ; Mas. 140. Hence, a vaunt, ('t is holy ground) Inst. 1. Hence, away, 't is holy ground! Inst. 12. sick'ning virtue fly the tainted ground? E. G.J1. With . . . plough to quell the flinty ground, E. G. 91. The sleeping fragrance from the ground; Vic. 6. and cleaves the solid ground. Stat. 1 52. The ponderous mass sinks in the cleaving ground, Stat? 16. Grove. th' expanse below Of grove . . . survey, Eton 7. Groves. The rocks and nodding groves rebellow P. P. 12. Ye brown o'er-arching groves, Inst. 27. Grow. See the griesly texture grow! F. S. 9. As lawless force from confidence will grow E. G. 98. Growing. nor circumscribe alone Their growing virtues, El. 66. the growing Powers Of Nature E.G. it,. Grown. See also Full-grown, Moss-grown. careless grown, Lethargic nods Ign. 23. Grows. quaff the pendent Vintage as it grows. E. G. 57. Where broad and turbulent it grows Vic. 58. •jThe Dowager grows a perfect double D. Ck. Cr. 4. Grub-street. +Here Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Gruff. Now clean, now hideous, mellow now, now gruff, Par. on Ep. I. Gualandi. Lanfranc there And Sigismundo, and Gualandi rode Dante 33. Guard. And guard us from long-winded Lubbers, L. S. 142. They guard with spirit what . . . they gain'd? E. G. 95. Guerre. See Nom de guerre. Guest. A baleful smile upon their baffled Guest. Bard 82. Guilt. say, Who th' Avenger of his guilt, Odin 61. the deeper My guilt, the blacker Agr. 173. Guiltless. Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. El. 60. Guise. Was fashion'd fair in meek and dove-like guise; Shak. 10. Gulf. Nor knew the gulf between. Cat 27. Gulls. See Sea-gulls. Gunna. Gunna, and Gondula, spread . . . your shield. F. S. Pem. 31. Guttle. In harmless society guttle and scold. C. C. 4. Gwyneth's. Gwyneth's shield. Owen 4. •(-They 're all diverted into H and B. Ch. Cr. 14. fHigh heaves his hugeness H, Ch. Cr. 21. •j-H mounts to Heaven, and H descends to Hell. Ch. Cr. 24. fAs H the Hebrew found, Ch. Cr. 25. Ha. Ha! no Traveller art thou, Odin 81. Ha ! by Juno, It bears a noble semblance, Agr. 119. Had. Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. all he had, a tear, El. 123. When he had fifty winters o'er him, L. S. 10. kind Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, L. S. 30. But Cobham had the polish given L. S. 31. Had told . . . there lurk'd ... a Poet, L.5.43. The bard, . . . Had in imagination fenc'd him, L. S. 114. When he the solemn hall had seen; L. S. 118. He once or twice had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 125. Already had condemn'd the sinner. L. S. 130. one Who had such liberal power Agr. 89. had her wanton son Lent us his wings, Agr. 189. He had not the method of making a fortune: Char. 2. Hag 57 Hanging Had I but the torrent's might, Hoel I. He ask'd and had the lovely maid. Hoel 10. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. i. — but he once had a wife; C. C. 14. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, "had Bute been true, View 17. Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; View zi. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. To ph. 8. She had a bad face Mrs. Keene 2. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat} 40. Scarce had he said, Tasso 39. The Morn had scarce commene'd, when I awoke: Dante 4 1 . too soon they had aroused 'em Dante 48. e'er the sixth Morn Had dawn'd, Dante 75. for then Hunger had reft my Eye-sight Dante 79. Hag. Th' .Emonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, Stat. 1 58. Haggard. With haggard eyes the Poet stood; Bard 18. Hagged. The ghostly Prudes with hagged face L. S. 129. Hail. All hail, ye genuine Kings, Britannia's Issue, hail! Bard no. Hail the task, and hail the hands! F. S. 53. To hail their Fitzroy's festal morning Inst. 54. Hail, horrors, hail! Ign. I. Hair. See also Raven-hair. Loose his beard, and hoary hair Stream'd, Bard 19. The Master of Clare Hits them all to a hair; Satire 22. Half. Half of thy heart we consecrate. Bard 99. Half pleas'd, half blushing, Bent. 2. Discover'd half, and half conceal'd their way; Tasso 46. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop? 10. She half accepts, and half rejects, my Fires, Prop? 22. Locks Of th' half devoured Head Dante 3. ■f-throw . . . half an act into the Fire: Ode 34. Half-averted. Our mother-church, with half-averted sight, Blush'd Toph. 5. Half-devoured. See Half and Devoured. Hall. Winn he the solemn hall had seen; L. S. 118. As to Trinity Hall We say nothing at all. Satire 36. Hallowed. Evr'y shade and hallow'd Fountain P. P. 75. spare the meek Usurper's hallow'd head. Bard MS. 90. Hamlet. The rude Forefathers of the hamlet El. 16. Hampden. See Village-Hampden. Hand. Still is the toiling hand of Care: Spring 21. Brushed by the hand of . . . Mischance, Spring 38. Dread goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand ! Adv. 34. numbs the soul with icy hand, Eton 89. Perching on the scept'red hand P. P. 20. with a Master's hand, and Prophet's fire, Bard 21. In Hoder^s hand the Heroe's doom: Odin 55. Owen . . . Lord of . . . Liberal hand, Owen 8. And to . . . thy gentle hand, Submits the fasces Inst. 85. her that . . . taught his novice hand Jgr. 30. To arm the hand of childhood, ^gr. 138. scatter with a free, though frugal, Hand E. G. 17. Soft Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 30. From table she rose, and with bumper in hand, C.C. 21. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand, Stat} 15. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat} 34. Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Stat. 1 39. His head a chaplet bore, his hand a Rod. Tasso 16. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Wars hand to hand with Cynthia let me wage. Prop. 1 4. Her artful hand across the sounding Strings. Prop? 16. The Hand that can my captive heart release, Prop? 87. with direful Hand Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 27. either Hand I gnaw'd For Anguish, Dante 63. -(-But the genial Hand of Time Ode 3. Hands. Hark, his hands the lyre explore! P. P. 107. And weave with bloody hands Bard 48. Hail the task, and hail the hands! F. S. 53. Hands, that the rod of empire might have sway'd, £/. 47 - scatter'd oft . . . By Hands unseen, El. Pem. 118; Mas. 138. The Huntingdons . . . Employ 'd the power of Fairy hands L. S. 4. Their hands he seized, Tasso 43. I 'd in the ring knit hands, Prop. 2 6. Handy. For thee fat Nanny sighs, and handy Nelly, Com. Lines 6. Hang. New hang down your head, C. C. 31. Hanging. the high brow of yonder hanging lawn. El. Mas. 116. Hangs 58 Hasty Hangs. who o'er thy country hangs The scourge of Heav'n. Bard 59. O'er it hangs the shield of gold; Odin 45. the . . . cloud That hangs on thy clear brow. Agr. 194. fHe in plantations hangs Ch. Cr. 40. Hapless. The hapless Nymph with wonder saw: Cat 19. Haply. Haply some . . . Swain may say, El. 97. haply eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 39. Happier. new-born Pleasure brings to happier Men: West 10. While Hope prolongs our happier hour, Vic. 33. Happiness. happiness too swiftly flies, Eton 97. The Sparks of Truth and Happiness E. G. 29. Oh, might that envied Happiness be mine! Prop. 3 67. Happy. Ah, happy hills, Eton 11. and envy oft thy happy grandsire's end. Bard MS. 76. Happy the Youth, and not unknown to Fame, Prop. 3 65. Hard. And hard Unkindness' alter'd eye, Eton 76. Hard by yon wood, El. 105. 'Tis hard th" elusive Symptoms to explore: Prop. 3 95. Harden. The parts combine and harden into Ore: Tasso 62. Hardened. So mov'd the Seer, but on no harden'd plain; Tasso 23. Hardy. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 108. Force and hardy Deeds of Blood prevail. E. G. 44. Hark. Hark, how thro' the peopled air Spring 23. Hark, his hands the lyre explore! P. P. 107. Hark, how each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 23. Hark! how the sacred Calm El. Mas. 81. But hark! the portals sound, Inst. 35. Hark! 'tis nature strikes the lyre, Vic. 19. Harm. 'T was there he aim'd the meditated harm,' Stat? 22. Harmless. In harmless society guttle and scold. C. C. 4. Harmonious. From Helicon's harmonious springs P. -P. 3. Harmony. The untaught harmony of spring: Spring 7. in dreadful harmony they join, Bard 47. Dryden's harmony submit to mine. Bent. 16. The strength and harmony of Life. Vic. 44. Harms. The Power of Herbs can other Harms remove, Prop. 3 79. Harness. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness? Agr. 97. Harnessed. a team of harness'd monarchs bend Ign. 38. Harp. Vocal no more, ... To high-born Hoel's harp, Bard 28. Harry. nor Harry heard, Cat Wal., Whar., Dods. 35. Here lives Harry Vane, Impr. Vane 1. Harvest. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield, El. 25. The crimson harvest of the foe. Conan 10. f Judgment from the Harvest flies Ode 9. Has. A Fav'rite has no friend ! Cat 36. Has curb'd the fury of his car, P. P. 18. has he giv'n in vain the heav'nly Muse? P. P. 48. The Muse has broke the twilight-gloom P. P. 56. has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 136. Till Lok has [have, MS.] burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. till substantial Night Has reassum'd her ancient right; Odin 92. Styack has often seen the sight L. S. 103. who oft has bade, Agr. 69. The very power he has -Agr. 81. Has he beheld the glittering front of war? Agr. 94. Sylla has his friends, Agr. I0 °- giddy fame Has spread among the crowd; Agr. 168. The Sparks of Truth . . . has given. E. G. 29. See the Wretch, that long has tost Vic. 45. The Master of Pembroke Has from them his system took; Satire 30. The Master of Peter's Has all the same features; Satire 32. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop. 3 66. Has oft the Charms of Constancy confest, Prop. 3 72. fyet has not a pain; Ch. Cr. 29. Hast. No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, Spring 46. thou hast seen Eton 21. 'Tis like, thou hast forgot, Agr. 33. Haste. Haste, the loom of Hell prepare, F. S. 2. Haste thee, fly These hated walls Agr. 155. Why this unavailing haste? Song 8. Hasty. On hasty wings thy youth is flown; Spring 48. Hasty, hasty Rout is there, Owen 34. with hasty steps ... To meet the sun El. 99. Hat 59 Health With hasty footsteps brush the dews away El. Mas. 1 1 5. hasty to renew The hellish Feast, Dante 83. Hat. His high-crown'd hat, and sattin-doublet, L. 5. 14. Hate. Could love, and could hate, Char. 3. Hated. These hated walls that seem to mock my shame, Agr. 156. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; J ' iew 22. Hates. And hates the Tale of Troy Prop? 74. Hath. Thrice hath Hyperion roll'd his . . . race, Ign. 11. Hats. The Audience . . . doff their hats L. S. no. Hattons. The Huntingdons and Hattons there L. S. 3. Hauberk. Helm, nor Hauberk's twisted mail, Bard 5. Hauberk crash, and helmet ring. F. S. 24. Haughty, a rock, whose haughty brow Frowns Bard 15. Haughty knights and barons bold, Bard Lett. 2 in. lilies . . . From haughty Gallia torn, Inst. 40. A thousand haughty hearts, Agr. 17. haughty youth[,] and irritated power.f,] Agr. 26, 28. Haunt. Thy once loved haunt, this . . . shade. El. Mas. 112. Haunts. In cloisters dim, far from the haunts of Folly, Inst. 33. Have. on these mould'ring bones have beat The winter's snow, Odin^i. Till Lck have burst his tenfold chain; Odin MS. 90. The Godhead would have back'd his quarrel, L.S.93. I have pursued your steps, Have seen your soul, Agr. 54, 55. the phantom I have raised? Agr. 86. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness? Agr. 96. those of Egypt, Have not forgot your sire: Agr. 1 1 6. the Praetorian camp have long rever'd Agr. 117. things, that . . . Have arch'd the hearer's brow, Agr. 169. have beguil'd ... the dazzled sight Agr. 190. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. As oft have issued, E. G. 50. Have ye seen the dusky boar, Caradoc 1. Much have I borne from canker'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. Owls would have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. *T is a sign you have eat just enough Couplet 2. Attend, and say if he have injured me. Dante 21. What would you have? yet wept I not, Dante 57. fSome have loved, and loved (they say) Rond. 5. fThen have left, to love anew: Rond. 7. fSome have lov'd, to pass the time, Rond. 13. fAnd have loved their love in rhyme: Rond. 14. -(They who just have felt the flame Rond. 21. Havoc. Years of havock urge their destined course, BardS$. We the reins to havock give, F. S. Pern. 33. Havock. See Havoc. He, omitted. Head. Oh, gently on thy Suppliant's head, Adv. 33. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bard 34. spare the meek Usurper's holy head. Bar d 90. Each a gasping Warriour's head. F. S. 12. Fate demands a nobler head; F. S. 43. Baldens head to death is giv'n. Odin 47. rests his head upon the lap of Earth El. 1 17. nods his hoary head, and listens to the rhyme. Inst. 26. The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 74. from the dust uprear his reverend head, Agr. 142. Never hang down your head, C. C. 31. With servile simper nod the mitred head. Toph. 4. and o'er his head, . . . the circle sped ; Stat. 1 47. His head a chaplet bore, Tasso 16. Euphrates' font, and Nile's mysterious head. Tasso 56. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop. 2 9. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Prop. 2 13. The hissing terrors round Alecto's head, Prop. 2 42. Locks Of th' half devoured Head Dante 3. fand my head Rhimed on, Ode 21. fP pokes his head out, Ch. Cr. 29. Headed. See also Hoary-headed, headed by this The deadliest. Dante 34. Headlong. She tumbled headlong in. Cat 30. Headlong, impetuous, see it pour; P. P. 11. headlong from the mountain's height ... he plung'd Bard i^- With headlong rage and wild affright Hoel 2. Heads. On the Heads of thy Houses, Satire 3. When Pindus' self . . . bows his hundred heads; Prop. 2 32. Heal. Heal the slow Chief, and send again Prop? 82. Health. Theirs buxom health Eton 45. Cares, That Health and Vigour to the Soul im- part, E.G. 11. Heap 60 Heaven Heap. heaves the turf in many a mould'ring heap, El. 14. heap [at,Mas.] the shrine of Luxury El. 71. Heaped. heap'd his master's feet around, Owen 29. Heaps. Owen . . . nor heaps his brooded stores, Owen 5. He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoel8. Hear. Methinks I hear in accents low Spring 41. They hear a voice Eton 39. frantic Passions hear thy soft controul. P. P. 16. to hear the savage Youth repeat P. P. 60. They hear not, Bard MS. 73. Hear from the grave, great Taliessin, hear; Bard 121. Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile E/.31. To hear the spirit of Britannicus Yet walks on earth: Agr. 14» If ... my voice ye hear, Agr. 178. I fruitless mourn to him that cannot hear, West 13. now hear My Wrongs, Dante 14. Heard. Nor Susan heard. Cat 35. But ah! 't is heard no more — P. P. 1 11. Heard ye the din of battle bray, Bard 83. My Lady heard their joint petition, L. S. 49. He heard the distant din of war. L. S. 76. Yet something he was heard to mutter, L. S. 121. Divinity heard, between waking and dozing, C. C. 19. No tree is heard to whisper, View 10. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar, Tasso 6. I heard 'em wail for Bread. Dante 45. I heard the dreadful Clash of Bars, Dante 51. I heard Their doleful Cries; Dante 76. that heard me now no more: Dante 80. Hearer's. things, that . . . Have arch'd the hearer's brow, Agr. 169. Hearest. Mortal, thou that hear'st the tale, F. S. 57. when thou hear'st the organ piping shrill Shak. 15. Hears. she hears me not, but, careless grown, Ign. 23. Heart. What female heart can gold despise? Cat 23. To soften, not to wound my heart. Adv. 44. Jealousy . . . That inly gnaws the secret heart, Eton 67. Dear, as the ruddy drops that warm my heart, Bard 41. No pitying heart, . . . afford A tear Bar d 65. Half of thy heart we consecrate. Bar d 99. Liberal hand, and open heart. Owen 8. Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. Large was his bounty, and his heart sincere, El. Mas. 145. Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, L. S. 15. Thy liberal heart, . . . The flow'r unheeded shall descry, Inst.ji. a heart like mine, A heart that glows Agr. 49, 50. the soft springs of pity in my heart, Agr. 182. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. warm the opening Heart. E. G. 12. A heart, within whose sacred cell Clerke 3. And bids the pure in heart behold their God. Stanza 4. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. The Hand that can my captive heart release, Prop 3 87. that unutter'd nathless wrings My inmost Heart ? Dante 6. to think, what my poor Heart Foresaw, Dante 46. ■(•Long to seek a mutual heart, Rond. 2, 10, 18, 26, 34. fCent'ring, rivets heart to heart, Rond. 30. Hearth. no more the blazing hearth shall burn, El. 21. Hearts. Not all that tempts your . . . heedless hearts, Cat 41. A thousand haughty hearts, Agr. 17. steel our hearts to war? E. G. 69. Heat. The winter's snow, the summer's heat, Odin 32. +1 told Of Phcebus' heat and Daphne's cold. Ode 24. Heath. Horror covers all the heath, F. S. 49. Along the heath, and near his . . . tree; El. no. While o'er the Heath we hied, El. Mas. 118, Heaved. The eyeless Cyclops heav'd the craggy rock; Stat? 19. Heaven. The scourge of Heav'n. Bard 60, what [solemn, Lett. 1 ] scenes of Heaven on Snow- don's height Bard MS. 105. Rapture . . . Waves in the eye of Heav'n Bard 124. Pain can reach the Sons of Heav'n! Odin 48. Heav'n did a recompence . . . send: El. 122. He gain'd from Heav'n ... a friend. El. 124. kind Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, L. S. 29. to all the Kind impartial Heaven . . . has given. E. G. 28. pomp and prodigality of heav'n. Bent. 20. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop. 2 45. +H mounts to Heaven, and H descends to Hell. Ch. Cr. 24. Heavenly 61 Here Heavenly. To thee he gave the heav'nly Birth, Adv. II. has he giv'n in vain the heav'nly Muse? P. P. 48. And rubies flame, with sapphire's heavenly blue, Tasso 68. Heaven's, round heav'n's altars shed The fragrance Inst. 73. the rest is heav'n's; Agr. 69. Heaves. Where heaves the turf in many a mould'ring heap, El. 14. ■j-High heaves his hugeness H, Ch. Cr. 21. Heavier. Heavier toil, superior pain. Inst. 58. Heavy. benefits ... sit heavy on the soul, Agr. 75. Comes quiv'ring down Heavy and huge, Stat. 1 52. Hebrew. fAs H the Hebrew found, Ch. Cr. 25. Heed. He Perchance may heed 'em: Agr. 88. Heedless. Not all that tempts your . . . heedless hearts, Cat 41. Height, what solemn scenes on Snowdon's height Bard 105. headlong from the mountain's height ... he plung'd Bard 143. To raise the cieling's fretted height, L. S. 5. raise the mortal to a height divine. E. G. 83. The theatre's green height and woody wall Tremble Stat? 14. Heighten. My struggling Sorrow, nor to heighten theirs: Dante 69. Heights. the stately brow Of Windsor's heights Eton 6. heart . . . Gain the rough heights, Agr. 53. Hela's. steep . . . That leads to Hela's drear abode. Odin 4. Helen. So Helen look'd, So her white neck reclin'd, Agr. 194. Helen's. hates the Tale of Troy for Helen's Sake. Prop. 3 74. Helicon's. From Helicon's harmonious springs P. P. 3. Hell. The characters of hell to trace. Bard 52. Haste, the loom of Hell prepare, F. S. 2. The portals nine of hell arise. Odin 16. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can fed, Prop? 45. fH mounts to Heaven, and H descends to Hell. Ch. Cr. 24. Hell-hounds, chas'd by Hell-hounds gaunt and bloody Dante 30. Hellish. hasty to renew The hellish Feast Dante 84. Hell's. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous bor- ders, Toph. 7. Helm. Helm, nor Hauberk's twisted mail, Bard 5. and Pleasure at the helm; Bard 74. With dazzling helm, and horrent spear. Bard MS. 112. Helmet. Hauberk crash, and helmet ring. F. S. 24. Help. imploreing In vain my Help, Dante 74. Helpless. Your helpless, old, expiring master view ! Bard MS. 72. his helpless offspring soon O'erta'en beheld, Dante 38. Helps. No common helps, no common guide ye need, Tasso 29. Hence. From hence, ye Beauties, Cat 37. Sisters, hence with spurs of speed: F. S. 61. Hie thee hence, and boast at home, Odin 87. Hence, avaunt, ('tis holy ground) Inst. I. Hence, away, 't is holy ground! Inst. 12. Hence rise my fears. Agr. 56. Henry. And either Henry there, Inst. 45. |Henry the Eighth's most monstrous majesty, Ch. Cr. 22. Henry's. Science still adores Her Henry's holy shade; Eton 4. Her, omitted. Heraldry. The boast of heraldry, EL 33. Herbs. The Power of Herbs can other Harms remove, Prop? 79. Herd. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. when the idle herd . . . yet will start Agr. 129. The Herd stood drooping by: Vic. 24. Herds. The panting herds repose: Spring 22. Here. Leave me unbless'd, unpitied, here to mourn: Bard 102. nor here forlorn Bard MS. 101. Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest, El 59. By sympathetic musings here delayed, El. Mas. no. Here rests'his head upon the lap of Earth EL 117. Here measured Laws and philosophic Ease E. G. 40. Here Force and hardy Deeds of Blood prevail. E. G. 44. Hero 62 Him Her infant image here below, Sits smiling Clerke 9. Here, lies ... A child, Child 1. Here, . . . Williams fought for England's fair renown; Williams 1. What a pother is here about wenching and roar- ing! C. C. 23. Here Holland form'd the pious resolution View 2. Here sea-gulls scream, View 7. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Here [Now, MS.] mouldering fanes and battle- ments arise, View 13. Here lives Harry Vane, Impr. Vane 1. Here lies Edmund Keene Lord Bishop of Ches- ter, Ep. Keene 1. Here lies Mrs. Keene Mrs. Keene 1. Here gems break through the night Tasso 63. Here the soft emerald smiles of verdant hue, Tasso 67. Here should Augustus great in Arms appear, Prop? 41. Here Mutina from flames and famine free, Prop? 43. Here Arts are vain, Prop? 85. ■j-Here Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Hero. This mighty emperor, this dreaded hero, Agr. 93. difficult the toil To seek your Hero Tasso 28. Eeroe's. See Hero's. Heroic. •f-If heroic Verse I 'm reading Ode 26. Heroine. And Anjou's heroine, Inst. 43. Heroines. The Heroines undertook the task, L. S. 53. Hero's. In Hoder^s hand the Heroe's doom: Odin 55. Verse, the hero's sole reward. Conan 4. To paint the Hero's Toil, Prop? 33. Herself. Justice to herself severe, Adv. 31. She reveres herself and thee. Inst. 82. Hetties. j-No more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch. Cr. 11. Hid. With . . . aprons long they hid their armour, L. 5. 38. Hidden. Some hidden Spirit shall inquire thy Fate, El. Dods. 96. Hide. The struggling pangs of conscious truth to hide, El. 69. Nor . . . Let painted Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train Inst. 8. To hide her cares her only art, Clerke MS. 7. Hideous. More hideous than their Queen: Eton 84. Hoarse he bays with hideous din, Odin 9. Now clean, now hideous, mellow now, now gruff, Par. on Ep. I. Hides. That monthly waning hides her paly fires, Prop. 20. Hiding. This the force of Eirin hiding, Owen 11. Hie. Hie thee hence, and boast at home, Odin 87. Hied. While o'er the Heath we hied, El. Mas. 118. High. See also Mountain-high. Then whirl the wretch from high. Eton 72. Fill high the sparkling bowl, Bard 77. High he rears his ruby crest. Owen 22. beech, That wreathes its . . . roots so high, El. 102. the high brow of yonder hanging lawn. El. Mas. 116. She 'd issue out her high commission L. S. 51. High Dames of honour once, L. S. 107. a glance from high They send Inst. 19. High potentates, and dames of royal birth, Inst. 37. due reverence to his high command: Agr. 4. To soar High as the consulate, Agr. 43. before His high tribunal thou and I Agr. 144. the sun is high advanc'd, -Agr. 158. thee, whose influence breathed from high Ign. 7. High on her car, behold the grandam ride Ign. 36. But chief, the Sky-lark warbles high Vic. 13. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat? 9. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat? 10. •(■High heaves his hugeness H, Ch. Cr. 21. High-born. Vocal no more, ... To high-born Hoel's harp, Bard 28. High-crowned. His high-crown'd hat, and sattin-doublet, L, S. 14. Hight. the Tower of Famine hight, Dante 24. Hilda. Sangrida, and Hilda see, Join . . . to aid: F. S. 18. Hill. I [we, Mas.] miss'd him on the custom'd hill, El. 109. Hills. Ah, happy hills. Eton 11. On Thracia's hills the Lord of War P. P. 17. From Cambria's thousand hills Bard MS. 109. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat? 17. Him, omitted. Hippomedon 63 Honourable Hippomedon. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, — (Hippo- medon,) Stat. 1 13. come on, With sturdy step and slow, Hippome- don; Stat. 2 2. His, omitted. Hissed. She swept, she hiss'd, she ripen'd and grew rough, Par. on Ep. 2. Hissing. The hissing terrors round Alecto's head, Prop? 42. History. read their hist'ry in a nation's eyes. El. 64. Your Hist'ry whither are you spinning? L. S. 19. Big with the important Nothing's History. Prop. 3 30. Hither. Yet hither oft a glance . . . They send Inst. 19. nor on what Errand Sent hither: Dante 11. Hits. The Master of Clare Hits them all to a hair; Satire 22. Hive. No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, Spring 46. Hoarded. No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, Spring 46. He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; HoelB. Hoarse. Hoarse he bays with hideous din, Odin 9. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar, Tasso 6. Hoarser. Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breath; Bar d 26. f K, as a man, with hoarser accent speaks, Ch. Cr. 47. Hoary. Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 9. Loose his beard, and hoary hair Stream'd, Bard 19. And hoary Nile with pensive Aspect seem Prop? 49. Hoary-headed, some hoary-headed Swain may say, El. 97. Hoder's. In Hoder's hand the Heroe's doom: Odin 55. By whom shall Hoder's blood be spilt? Odin 62. Till he on Hoder's corse shall smile Odin 69. Hoel. By them, my friend, my Hoel, died, Hoel 6. Hoel's. . Vocal no more, ... To high-born Hoel's harp, Bard 28. Hold. Then grasp'd its weight, elusive of his hold ; Stat. 1 42. Holds. all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. 6. Climes, where Winter holds his Reign, E. G. 5. Hole. Each hole and cupboard they explore, L. S. 61. Holland. Here Holland form'd the pious resolution View 2. Hollow. Till from out the hollow ground Odin 25. To taste of hollow kindness, Agr. 19. Holy. Science still adores Her Henry's holy Shade; Eton 4. and Freedom's holy flame. P. P. 65. her holy dew. Bar d MS. 74. spare the meek Usurper's holy [hallow'd, MS.] head. Bard 90. many a holy text around she strews, El. 83. Hence, avaunt, ('tis holy ground) Inst. 1. Hence, away, 't is holy ground! Inst. 12. Homage. the Graces homage pay. P. P. 37. The willing homage Of prostrate Rome, Agr. 76. Home. Hie thee hence, and boast at home, Odin 87. Homely. Their homely joys, and destiny obscure; El. 30. Homeward. The plowman homeward plods his weary way, El. i. Honest. his plain soldier's oath, and honest seeming. Agr. 151. Honeyed. See Honied. Honey's. But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall Shah n. Honied. Eager to taste the honied spring, Spring 26. Honor. High Dames of honour once, L. S. 107. Thy steady course of honour keep, Inst. 91. grasp the dangerous honour. Agr. 53. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; Williams 6. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoel 14. Spare the honour of my love. Song 12. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Stat. 1 9. Thou envied Honour of thy Poet's Days, Prop? 103. Honorable. There . . . Despair and honourable Death. Owen 40. Honor's. Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust? £/. 43 . Honors. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop? 14. Honour. See Honor. Honourable. See Honorable. Hoods 64 How Hoods. In peaked hoods and mantles tarnish'd, L. S. 105. Cried the square Hoods inwoful fidget L. S. 135. Hoops. To chase the hoop's elusive speed, Eton MS. 29. Convey 'd him underneath their hoops L. S. 71. Hooted. Owls would have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. Hope. Gay hope is theirs Eton 41. . . . they alike in trembling hope repose, El. 127. much I hope these walls alone Agr. 22. While Hope prolongs our happier hour, Vic. 33. Flush 'd with mirth and hope they burn: Hoel 19. Hoped. Yet hop'd, that he might save his bacon: L. S. 126. Hopeless. cross'd in hopeless love. El. 108. The Muses, hopeless of his pardon, Convey'd him L. 5. 70. Hopes. check their tender Hopes with . . . Fear, E. G. 20. Horn. the echoing horn, El. 19. Horrent. With dazzling helm, and horrent spear. BardMS. 112. Horrid. That which yet remains ... (a horrid Tale) Dante 19. Horror. Of Horrour [Terror, MS.] that, P. P. 93. A smile of horror Bard MS. 82. Horrour, Tyrant of the throbbing breast. Bard 130. With horror wild that chills the throbbing breast. Bard Lett. 2 130. Horror covers all the heath, F. S. 49. But pictured horrour and poetic woes. Prop? 50. Horror's. With screaming Horror's funeral cry, Adv. 39. Horrors. gilds the horrors of the deep. Inst. 94. Ye unavailing horrors, fruitless crimes! Agr. 177. Hail, horrors, hail! Ign. 1. new horrors [terrors, Nich.] still to bring. View 12. the horrors which we feign: View Nich. 20. Horrour. See Horror. Horse. Lance to lance, and horse to horse? Bard 84. Hosannas. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous borders, Toph. 7. Hospitable. partake His hospitable board: Agr. 20. Host. oft have issued, Host impelling Host, E. G. 50. Swift at the word, from out the gazing host, Stat. 1 4. Hosts. Big with hosts . . . Squadrons . . . came; Owen 9 Hounds. See Hell-hounds. Hour. Whose iron scourge and tort 'ring hour Adv. 3 in Greece's evil hour, p. p. 77 Awaits alike th' inevitable hour. El. 35 a secret and dead hour of night, Agr. 61 While Hope prolongs our happier hour, Vic. 33 Steal to his closet at the hour of prayer; Shak. 14 Th' iEmonian hag enjoys her dreadful hour, Stat. 1 58 now the Hour Of timely Food approach 'd; Dante 49 Hours. Lo! where the rosy bosom'd Hours, Spring 1 'Gainst graver hours, Eton 33 why do I waste the fruitless hours Agr. 154 Long as of youth the joyous hours remain, Prop? 1 These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop. 2 51 House. See also Great-house. A House there is, (and that's enough) L. S. 21 the genuine blood Of our imperial house. Agr. 105 within That House of Woe. Dante 61 Household. there to tend Her household cares, Agr. 8. Houses. On the Heads of thy Houses, Satire 3. Housewife. Or busy housewife [Hus-wife, Mas.] ply her even- ing care : El. 22. Hovered. that hover'd in thy noontide ray ? Bard MS. 69. Hovering. Bright-eyed Fancy hov'ring o'er P. P. 108. How. How vain the ardour of the Crowd, Spring 18. How low, how little are the Proud, Spring 19. How indigent the Great [proud, Dods.]! Spring 20. Yet hark, how thro' the peopled air Spring 23 . Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. Beneath the Good how far — P. P. 123. Hark, how each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 23 . How jocund did they drive their team El. 27. How bow'd the woods beneath their sturdy stroke! El. 28. how the sacred Calm, that broods around, El. Mas. 81. How in the park . . . He . . . had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 122. What if you add, how she turn'd pale Agr. 9. How vast the debt of gratitude -Agr. 57. how oft in weak and sickly minds Agr. 72. How shall the spark . . . Blaze Agr. 128. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form E. G. 26. Howe'er 65 Ah! say, . . . how these symptoms befell me? Am. Lines 7 How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop. 2 23 How flames . . . Shall sink this beauteous fabric Prop. 2 27 How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop. 2 37 Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop. 3 38 •f-Queen Esther nest — how fair e'en after death Ch. Cr. 9 Howe'er. Howe'er Opinion tinge the . . . Mind, E. G. 27 Huddle. huddle up in fogs the dang'rous fire. Ign. 22. Hue. Their scaly armour's Tyrian hue Cat 16. Theirs buxom health of rosy hue, Eton 45. avaunt, . . . dreaming Sloth of pallid hue, Inst. 4. A brighter Day, and Skies of azure Hue; E.G. 55. Here the soft emerald smiles of verdant hue, Tasso 67. Hues. With orient hues, unborrow'd of the Sun: P. P. 120. The hues of Bliss more brightly glow, Vic. 41. Huge. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bard 34. Black and huge along they sweep, Owen 17. Papers and books, a huge Imbroglio! L. S. 66. As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, Stat. 1 26. comes quiv'ring down, Heavy and huge, Stat. 1 51. Hugely, the Master of Jesus Does hugely displease us; Satire 6. Hugeness. fHigh heaves his hugeness H, Ch. Cr. 21. Hugs. Servitude that hugs her chain, Inst. 6. Human. Thou Tamer of the human breast, Adv. 2. The Ministers of human fate, Eton 56. 'T is of human entrails made F. S. 10. from his jaws, . . . Foam and human gore dis- till'd: OdinS. Their human passions now no more, Inst. 49. the human fabric from the birth Imbibes E. G. 84. Humanity. faith sincere, And soft humanity were there. Clerke 6. Humble. Humble quiet builds her cell, Vic. 53. Science frown'd not on his humble birth, El. 119. Humid, draws his humid train of mud: Ign. 4. Hundred. their hundred arms they wave, Bard 25. Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 12. When Pindus' self . . . bows his hundred heads; Prop 2 32. Hunger. For Anguish, which they construed Hunger; Dante 64. for then Hunger had reft my Eye-sight Dante 79. The fourth, what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante Si. Hungry. The hungry Pack their sharp-set Fangs embrued. Dante 40. Huntingdons. The Huntingdons and Hattons there L. S. 3. Hurled. in ruin hurl'd, Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 93. Upon Deira's squadrons hurl'd Hoel 3. but hurl'd upright, Emits the mass, Stat. 1 45. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat. 2 9. For adverse fate the captive chief has hurl'd Tasso 33. How flames perhaps, with dire confusion hurl'd, Prop. 2 27. Hurls. Hurls ... his glitt'ring shafts of war. P. P. MS. 52. Hurry. Hurry, hurry to the field. F. S. 64. Hurry-skurry. Run hurry-skurry round the floor, L. S. 63. Hurt. Without design to hurt the butter, L. S. 123. And all the scenes, that hurt the grave's repose, Prop. 2 49. The Melian's Hurt Machaon could repair, Prop? 81. Nor changing Skies can hurt, Prop? 94. Hurtles. Iron-sleet . . . Hurtles in the darken'd air. F. S. 4. Hushed. tongue, That hush'd the stormy main: Bard^o. That, hush'd in grim repose, expects his evening- prey. Bard 76. Hyperion. Till fierce Hyperion from afar P. P. MS. 52. Hyperion hurls around his glitt'ring shafts P. P. MS. 53. Thrice hath Hyperion roll'd his . . . race, Ign. 11. Hyperion's. Hyperion's march they spy, P. P. 53. I. ■f-As H the Hebrew found, so I the Jew, Ch. Cr. 25. I, pron., omitted. Ice-built 66 Impartial Ice-built. shaggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. Icy. numbs the soul with icy hand, Eton 89. And winter binds the floods in icy chains, Tasso 18. I 'd. See also Would. I 'd in the ring knit hands, Prop? 6. To Providence, to Him my thoughts I *d raise, Prop. 2 16. Idalia. O'er Idalia's velvet-green P. P. 27. Idiom. The manners speak the idiom of their soil. E. G. 87. Idle. What idle progeny succeed Eton 28. Self-pleasing Folly's idle brood, Adv. 18. They mock the air with idle state. Bar d 4. when the idle herd ... yet will start, Agr. 129. Idle notes! untimely green! Song 7. Idly. Instruction . . . idly lavishes her Stores, E. G. 14. Idolize. Exalt the brave, and idolize Success; El. Mas. 74. If. If Mem'ry o'er their Tomb no Trophies raise, El. 38. If chance . . . Some kindred spirit El. 95. If chance that e'er some pensive spirit. El. Mas. 109. He went, as if the Devil drove him. L. S. 88. What if you add, how she turn'd pale Agr. 9. If bright ambition from her craggy seat Agr. 51. If the son reign, the mother perishes. Agr. 67. If from the realms of night Agr. 178. if your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. If murder cries for murder, Agr. 185. as if she knew not Whether she fear'd, Agr. 198. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. If equal Justice . . . Smile not indulgent E. G. 15. What wonder, if to patient valour train'd E. G. 94. If with adventrous oar and ready sail E. G. 104. if to some feeling breast Bent. 25. If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Shak. 13. The Bishop of Chester, ... If you scratch him will fester. Ext. Keene 4. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop? 39. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. If the thin Coan Web her shape reveal, Prop? 9. Or if to Musick she the Lyre awake, Prop? 13. If sinking into Sleep she seem to close Prop? 17. Or if, alas! it be my Fate Prop? 69. Or if I fall the Victim Prop? 77. yet if the telling may Beget Dante 6. Attend, and say if he have injured me. Dante 21. oh! if thou weep not now, Dante 47. if you resume your Gift; Dante 66. •flf a plenteous Crop arise, Ode 7. •j-If heroic Verse I 'm reading Ode 26. •j-But if my Myra cruel be Ode 29. ■f-buskin'd Strains, If Melpomene inspire, Ode 32. Ignoble. the madding crowd's ignoble strife, El. 73. Ignorance. where ignorance is bliss, Eton 99. And Ignorance with looks profound, Inst. 3. ignorance! soft salutary power! Ign. 9. all was ignorance, and all was night. Ign. 30. He. See also Isle. through the long-drawn He El. Pem., Mas. 39. Iliad. the long Iliad of the amorous Fight. Prop? 26. Ilissus. Fields, that cool Ilissus laves, P. P. 68. Ilium. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Hium Prop? 37. I'll. I '11 be Mrs. Twitcher myself. C. C. 32. 111. And find a Cure for every HI, Prop? 80. Ills. No sense have they of ills to come, Eton 53. Man's feeble race what Ills await, P. P. 42. For Ills unseen what Remedy is found ? Prop? 91. I'm. You know I 'm no prude, C. C. 7. •j-If heroic Verse I 'm reading Ode 26. Image. Her infant image here below, Sits smiling Clerke 9. Imagination. Had in imagination fenc'd him, L. S. 114. Imbibes. Imbibes a flavour of its parent earth, E. G.,85. Imbroglio. Papers and books, a huge Imbroglio! L. S. 66. Imbrued. See Embrued. Immersed. Immers'd in rapt'rous thought profound, Adv. 26. Immortal. Can powers immortal feel Ign. 26. glorious puddings and immortal pies. Shak. 24. immortal Boy! P. P. 91. Immortality. Strains of Immortality! F. S. 48. Imp. lurk'd A wicked Imp they call a Poet, L. S. 44. Impart. Thy milder influence impart, Adv. 42. Health and Vigour to the Soul impart, E.G. 11. Her pleasure, pleasures to impart, Clerke MS. 8. Impartial. Alike to all the Kind impartial Heav'n E. G. 28. Impelling 67 Inmost Impelling. Oft have issued, Host impelling Host, E. G. 50. Impending, fate Impending o'er your son: Agr. 66. Imperfect. in my Breast the imperfect Joys expire. West 8. Imperial. the genuine blood Of our imperial house. Agr. 105. Impetuous. Headlong, impetuous, see it pour; P. P. n. Impious. As by the Impious thou art seen Adv. 37. Fond impious Man, think'st thou, Bard 135. Implanted. f Nature in my Soul implanted: Ode 2. Imploreing. See Imploring. Implores. Implores the passing tribute of a sigh. El. 80. Imploring. imploreing In vain my Help, Dante 73. Important. Big with the important Nothing's History. Prop. 3 30. Importune, too proud to importune; Char. 1. Improve. Fix and improve the polish'd Arts of Peace: E.G. 41. Impute. Nor you, ye Proud, impute to These the fault, El. 37. In, omitted. Inactive. fthe rolling Sun Bursts the inactive Shell, Ode 44. Inborn. dares . . . Profane thy inborn royalty of mind: Inst. 81. Incense. incense kindled at the Muse's flame. El. 72. she ... no venal incense flings; Inst. 79. the grateful steam Of flattery's incense, Agr. 35. Incense-breathing. The breezy call of incense-breathing [om. Mas.] Morn, El. 17. Indies. Not I for the Indies! C. C. 7. Indigent. how indigent the proud, Spring Dods. 19. How indigent the Great! Spring 20. Indignant. Marking with indignant eye Owen 35. Bursts on my ear th' indignant lay: Inst. 14. sees far off with an indignant groan, E. G. 62. Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop? 38. Indite. Of the dear Web whole Volumes I indite: Prop? 12. Indolence. Mark where Indolence and Pride, Vic. 61. Indulged. sweets of kindness lavishly indulg'd Agr. 73. Industry. Industry and Gain their Vigils keep, E. G. 42. Inevitable. Awaits alike th' inevitable hour. El. 35. Infamy. And grinning Infamy. Eton 74. the telling may Beget the Traitour's Infamy, Dante 7. Infant, he . . . bad to form her infant mind. Adv. 12. before his infant [visionary, MS.] eyes P. P. 118. Her infant image here below, Sits smiling Clerke 9. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; Williams 6. Infant-gore. « The bristled Boar in infant-gore Wallows Bard 93. Inferior. th' inferior laws that rule our clay: E. G. 80. Infernal. Or drive the infernal Vulture Prop? 90. Inflicts. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop? 45. Influence. Thy milder influence impart, Adv. 42. thee, whose influence breathed from high Ign. 7. the influence of the northern star E. G. 68. as their pleasing influence Bent. 27. •(•Whose influence first bid it live. Ode 54. Ingenuous. quench the blushes of ingenuous shame, El. 70. Inglorious. Some mute inglorious Milton El. 59. These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop? 51. Ingratitude. the blacker his ingratitude. Agr. 173. Inherit. tho' he inherit Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 113. Inhospitable. Oceans unknown, inhospitable Sands ! Tasso 32. Injured. your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. Attend, and say if he have injured me. Dante 21. Injurious. The cool injurious eye of frozen kindness. Agr. 162. Inly. Jealousy . . . that inly gnaws Eton 67. Inmost. Beneath the obedient river's inmost bed; Tasso 44. Innocence 68 Its Earth's inmost cells, and caves of deep descent; Tasso 50. that unutter'd nathless wrings My inmost Heart? Dante 6. Innocence. More to Innocence their Safety owe El. Mas. 75. Inquire. See Enquire. Inquirer. See Enquirer. Inquiry. See Enquiry. Insatiate. I ceaseless gnaw insatiate; Dante 8. Insect. The insect youth are on the wing, Spring 25. Inspiration. Inspiration breath'd around: P. P. 74. Is that diviner inspiration giv'n, Bent. 18. Inspire. ■j-buskin'd Strains, If Melpomene inspire, Ode 32. Inspires. She is my Genius, she inspires the Lines; Prop. 3 4. Instruction. fond Instruction . . . idly lavishes her Stores, E. G. 13. Insult. these bones from insult to protect El. 77. Insult the plenty of the vales below? E. G. 99. Intent. Presumptuous Maid! with looks intent Cat 25. Intercept. Age step 'twixt love and me, and intercept the joy; Prop. 2 12. Intercepts. Pisa's Mount, that intercepts the View Of Lucca, Dante 29. Interleaved. Though now a book, and interleaved [interleav'd, Lett. 4 ] you see. Shak. 4. Intermingled. dart their intermingled rays, Bent. 23. Into. But bounce into the parlour enter'd. L. S. 56. Into the Drawers and China pry, L. S. 65. How shall the spark . . . Blaze into freedom, Agr. 129. Better be twisted into caps for spice, Shak. 19. Whate'er . . . Floats into Lakes, and bubbles into rills; Tasso 54. The parts combine and harden into Ore: Tasso 62. If sinking into Sleep she seem to close Prop? 17. ■(•throw . . . half an act into the Fire: Ode 34. •(■Elizabeths all dwindled into Betties; Ch. Cr. 12. •(•They 're all diverted into H and B. Ch. Cr. 14. Invention. Theirs . . . invention ever-new, Eton 46. Invisible. chains invisible the border. Invocation. charms, and solemn invocation, Agr. 63. Invokes. Art he invokes new horrors still to bring. View 12. Involuntary. Forgive, ye Proud, th' involuntary Fault, El. Dods., Pern., Eg., Mas. 37. Ios. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop. 3 47. Iron. Whose iron scourge and tort'ring hour Adv. 3. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness? Agr. 97. Earth's monster-brood stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop. 3 41. Iron-race. An Iron-race the mountain-cliffs maintain, E. G. 88. Iron-sleep. Enquirer come To break my iron-sleep again; Odin 89. Iron-sleet. Iron-sleet of arrowy shower Hurtles F. S. 3. Irresolute. Irresolute they stand; Tasso 11. Irritated. haughty youth[,] and irritated power. [,] Agr. 26, 28. Is, omitted. Isaac. ■(•See Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view; Ch. Cr. a6. Isle. See also Isle. through the long-drawn isle El. 39. In Britain's Isle, . . . An ancient pile . . . stands: L. S. 1. Isles. Isles, that crown the Egaean deep, P. P. 67. Israel. Did not Israel filch from the Egyptians of old C. C. 25. •(■See Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch. Cr. 28. Issue. ye genuine Kings, Britannia's Issue, hail ! Bard no. Swore . . . She'd issue out her high commission L.S.51. Issued. oft have issued, Host impelling Host, E. G. 50. Issues. House . . . From whence one fatal morning issues L. S. 22. It, omitted. Its. desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F.S.38. The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 74. L. S. 84. soul, and wonder'd at its daring: Agr. 55- Ivory 69 Joy its will seem'd wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. reflection Pours its cool dictates Agr. 83. shake . . . To its original atoms — Agr. 92. I will not meet its poison. Agr. 163. a flavour of its parent earth, E. G. 85. As the whirlwind in its course; Conan 6. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3 . And furthest send its weight Stat} 1. Then grasp'd its weight, Stat. 1 41. through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 50. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat? 10. The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat. 1 13. ere it precipitates its fall Stat. 2 15. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Whate'er with copious train its channel fills, Tasso 53. Proud of its diamond dies, Tasso 70. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop. 2 14. Who taught this vast machine its steadfast laws, Prop? 17. How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop? 37. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop? 58. And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop? 88. Ivory. Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: Prop? 8. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? 11. Ivy-mantled. from yonder ivy-mantled tow'r El. 9. Ixion's. The pendent rock, Ision's whirling wheel, Prop? 46. Jacob. tSee Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view; Ch. Cr. 26. Janes. The lady Janes and Joans repair, L. S. 99. Javelins. Pikes must shiver, javelins sing, F. S. 22. Jaws. from his jaws, . . . Foam and human gore dis- tffl'd: Odin 7. Jealousy. Jealousy with rankling tooth, Eton 66. the dazzled sight Of wakeful jealousy. Agr. 192. Jeer. f Here Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Jemmy. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. 1. Jerusalem. fThe walls of old Jerusalem appear, Ch. Cr. 27. Jesu-Maria. Jesu-Maria! Madam Bridget, L. S. 133. Jesus. Know the Master of Jesus Does hugely displease us; Satire 5. Jet. Her ears of jet . . . she saw; Cat II. Jetty. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop? 14. Jew. •{-As H the Hebrew found, so I the Jew, Ch. Cr. 25. Jewels. Their jewels of silver and jewels of gold? C. C. 26. Joans. The lady Janes and Joans repair, L. S. 99. Jocund. How jocund did they drive their team afield ! El. 27. John's. The Master of St. John's Satire 33. Join. in dreadful harmony they join, Bard 47. Join the wayward work to aid: F. S. 19. Norman sails afar . . . join the war: Owen 16. While spirits . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 88. The Birds in vain their amorous Descant joyn; West 3 . I 'd in the ring knit hands, and joyn the Muses' dance. Prop? 6. Joint. My Lady heard their joint petition, L. S. 49. the senate's joint applause, Agr. jj. Joints. This racks the joints, Eton 85. Joke. •j-Here Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Joseph. ■(-See Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view,- Ch. Cr. 26. Jove. Daughter of Jove, relentless Power, Adv. I. on the scept'red hand Of Jove, P. P. 21. justify the laws of Jove. P. P. 47. her that arm'd This painted Jove, Agr. 30. What colours paint the vivid arch of Jove; Prop .'29. nor Callimachus' enervate Strain May tell of Jove, Prop? 56. Joy. Her conscious tail her joy declar'd ; Cat 7. redolent of joy and youth, Eton 19. And snatch a fearful joy. Eton 40. Laughter, Noise, and thoughtless Joy, Adv. 19. This can unlock the gates of Joy; P. P. 92. With joy I see The different doom Bard 139. Songs of joy and triumph sing! F. S. 54. Joy to the victorious bands; F. S. 55. Short was his joy. L. S. 77. Joyous 70 King 't would dash his joy To hear the spirit Agr. 13. 'T is man alone that Joy descries Vic. 27. Age step 'twixt love and me, and intercept the joy; Prop? 12. Joyous. Long as of youth the joyous hours remain, Prop? 1. Joys. Thy Joys no glittering female meets, Spring 45. Their homely joys, and destiny obscure; El. 30. in my Breast the imperfect Joys expire. West 8. The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory, Stat? 12. These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop? 51. Judah. tSee Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch.Cr.iS. Judge. power To judge of weights and measures; Agr. 41. My Wrongs, and from them judge of my Re- venge. Dante 15. Judging. thy judging eye, The flow'r unheeded shall de- scry, Inst. 71. Judgment. Their Judgment mends the Plan E. G. 32. ■(•Judgment from the Harvest flies Ode 9. Juice. Nor genial Warmth, nor genial Juice E. G. 3. drink Nectar ... Or the grape's extatic juice. Hoel 18. Julian. glows with the pure Julian fire, Agr. 50. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop? 58. Julius. Ye Towers of Julius, London's lasting shame, Bard 87. Juno. By Juno, It bears a noble semblance. Agr. 119. Just. And to thy just, . . . hand, Submits the fasces Inst. 85. 'T is just like the picture in Rochester's book; C. C. 12. 'T is a sign you have eat just enough Couplet 2. ■j-They who just have felt the flame Rond. 21. Justice. With Justice to herself severe, Adv. 31. Justify. justify the laws of Jove. P. P. 47- K. +As K a King, Q represents a Queen, Ch.Cr. 45. +K, as a man, with hoarser accent speaks, Ch. Cr. 47. f Behold K struts, Ch. Cr. 49. Keen. keen Remorse with blood defil'd, Eton 78. they . . . veil'd their weapons bright and keen L. S. 39. Keene. Here lies Edmund Keene Lord Bishop of Chester, Ep. Keene I. Here lies Mrs. Keene Mrs. Keene 1. Keep. Yet shall he mount, and keep his distant way P. P. 121 Keep the tissue close and strong. F. S. 16 And keep my Lady from her Rubbers. L. S. 144 Thy steady course of honour keep, Inst. 91 Industry and Gain their Vigils keep, E. G. 42 Keeper. See Lord-keeper. Kept. They kept the noiseless tenor of their way. El. 76. Keys. Thine too these golden keys, P. P. 91. As the Master of Keys Satire 13. Kidney. Is of the same kidney; Satire 10. Kill. Ours to kill, and ours to spare: F. S. 34. Killed. And suck'd the eggs, and kill'd the pheasants. L. 5. 48. Killing. meaner Beauties . . . ape her art of killing. L. S. 28. Kind. The sportive kind reply: Spring 42. Demurest of the tabby kind, Cat 4. vain tho' kind enquiry El. Mas. III. The other Amazon kind Heaven Had arm'd L. S. 29. Alike to all the Kind E. G. 28. The triple dog that scares the shadowy kind, Prop? 44. He lived, while she was kind; Prop? 108. Kindled. incense kindled at the Muse's flame. El. 72. Kindly. unfriended, by those kindly Cares, E. G. 10. Kindness. lured ... To taste of hollow kindness, Agr. 19. The sweets of kindness . . . Rankle Agr. 73. cool injurious eye of frozen kindness. Agr. 162. Kindred. thro' the kindred squadrons mow their way. Bard 86. Some kindred spirit shall inquire El. 96. Welcome, ... To this, thy kindred train, and me: Inst. 68. See a kindred Grief pursue; Vic. 38. King. thy magic lulls the feather'd king P. P. 21. Ruin seize thee, ruthless King! Bar d 1. King's 71 Lamb O'er thee, oh King! their hundred arms they wave, Bard 25. Shrieks of an agonizing King! Bard 56. spread O'er the youthful King your shield. F. S. 32. Soon a King shall bite the ground. F. S. 44. Triumph to the younger King. F. S. 56. Uprose the King of Men with speed, Odin 1. King of Men, I know thee now; Odin 82. And so God save our noble King, L. S. 141. Then thus the King: — Stat} I. f As K a King, Q represents a Queen, Ch. Cr. 45. fas might a King become, Ch. Cr. 49. King's The Master of King's Satire 17. Kings. All hail, ye genuine Kings, Bard 110. Their Arms, their Kings, their Gods E. G. 49. Kiss. climb his knees the envied kiss to share. El. 24. Knee. bow the supple knee, Agr. 101. Firmly he plants each knee, Stat} 47. Knees. No children . . . climb his knees El. 24. Knell. The Curfew tolls the knell of parting day, El. 1. fLight to them the parting knell: Rond. 23. Knew. Nor knew the gulf between. Cat 27. He little knew L. S. 77. as if she knew not Whether she fear'd, Agr. 198. what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. Knights. Youthful knights, and barons bold BardMS. m. Knit. I 'd in the ring knit hands, Prop. 2 6. Know. Know, one false step is ne'er retriev'd, Cat 38. why should they know their fate? Eton 95. What sorrow was, thou bad'st her know, Adv. 15. know myself a Man. Adv. 48. Thou the deeds of light shalt know; Odin 39. King of Men, I know thee now; Odin 82. By this time all the Parish know it L. S. 42. who know Without a spell to raise, Agr. 15. to know the fate Impending Agr. 65. The soft Returns of Gratitude they know, E - G 34- Their raptures . . . No yesterday, nor morrow know ; Vic. 26. You know I 'm no prude, C. C. 7. "I don't know," says Law, C. C. ii. Know the Master of Jesus Does hugely displease us ; Satire 5. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Prop. 2 13. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop. 2 39. no other Muse I know, Prop. 3 5. I know not, who thou art; Dante 10. Know, thou seest In me Count Ugolino, Dante 12. Gave not to know their Sum of Misery, Dante 43. Knowing. To weep without knowing the cause of my an- guish: Am. Lines 2. Knowledge. Knowledge . . . her ample page . . . did ne'er unroll; El. 49. Known. See also Well-known. and known To many a Wretch Dante 24. Knows. Knows his soft ear the trumpet's thrilling voice, A g r -95- Labor. Labour, and Penury, the racks of Pain, P. P. 43. With native spots and artful labour gay, Stat. 2 25. Labored. gorgeous phrase of labour'd eloquence Agr. 149. Laboring. every labouring sinew strains, Eton 86. Young Pterelas . . . drew, Labouring, the disc, Stat. 1 6. hag . . . smiles malignant on the labouring power. Stat. 1 59. Labors. some . . . Their murm'ring labours ply Eton 32. we hied, our Labours done, El. Mas. 118. Third in the labours of the disc come on, Stat. 2 1. Labour. See Labor. Laboured. See Labored. Labouring. See Laboring. Labours. See Labors. Labyrinths. In lingering Lab'rinths creep, P. P. 70. Lady. My Lady heard their joint petition, L. S. 49. The lady Janes and Joans repair, L. S. 99. My Lady rose, L. S. 131. And keep my Lady from her Rubbers. L. S. 144. Laid. Of Chili's boundless forests laid, P. P. 59. In thy green lap was Nature's Darling laid, P. P. 84. Low the dauntless Earl is laid, F. 5.41. was laid The dust of the prophetic Maid. Odin 19. Each in his narrow cell for ever laid, El. 15. in this neglected spot is laid Some heart El. 45. Lake. The pensive Selima . . . Gazed on the lake Cat 6. Lakes. Whate'er . . . Floats into Lakes, Tasso 54. Lamb. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child 3. Lambent 72 Lawful Lambent. ■(■Lightly lambent o'er their frame, Rond. 22. Lamed. Dried up the cows, and lam'd the deer, L. S. 47. Lamps. Lamps, that shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. Lance. drop'd his thirsty lance at thy command. P. P. 19. " To arms ! " cried Mortimer, and couch 'd his quiv'ring lance. Bard 14. Lance to lance, and horse to horse? Bard 84. So Caradoc bore his lance. Caradoc 4. Lances. Glitt'ring lances [launces, MS.] are the loom, F. S. 5. Land. Avengers of their native land : Bar d 46. scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, El. 63. dews Lethean through the land dispense Ign. 17. scatter . . . Showers of Plenty o'er the Land. E. G. 18. And mariners, though shipwreck'd, dread to land. View 8. his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 35. Lands. The . . . tide, that drowns her lessening lands, E.G. 61. What length of sea remains, what various lands, Tasso 31. Landscape. fades the glimmering landscape on the sight, Lanes. Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, Lanfranc. Lanfranc there And Sigismundo, Dante 32. Language. they speak . . . The liquid language of the skies: Inst. 56. Languid. languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E. G. 45. she seem to close Her languid Lids, Prop? 18. Languish. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. With beauty, with pleasure surrounded, to lan- guish — Am. Lines 1. Lap. In thy green lap was Nature's Darling laid, P. P. 84. rests his head upon the lap of Earth El. 117. nurs'd in ease And pleasure's flow'ry lap? Agr. 99. Large. Large was his bounty, El. 121. Largely. Heav'n did a recompence as largely send: El. 122. Lark. See also Sky-lark, Woodlark. 'T was the Lark that upward sprung ! Song 5. Lasting. Ye Towers of Julius, London's lasting shame, Bard 87. Fix'd by his touch a lasting essence take; Bent. 6. Late. sorrow never comes too late, Eton 96. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop. 3 51. fLate to find it: — and, again, Rond. 3,11, 19,27, 35. Late-descending. Swoll'n with new force, and late-descending rains. Tasso 10. Latent. Shall raise from earth the latent gem Inst. 75. Latest. Her latest agony of mind Clerke MS. 10. Latian. Left their Parnassus for the Latian plains. P. P. 78. Latium. Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. Laugh. they sing, they laugh, they tattle, L. S. 58. Laughing. moody Madness laughing wild Eton 79. The laughing flowers, that round them blow, P. P. 5. safe and laughing in his sleeve, L. S. 75. Give me to send the laughing bowl around, Prop. 2 7. Laughs. Fair laughs the Morn, Bard 71. where the face of nature laughs around, E. G. 70. Laughter. Wild Laughter, Noise, and thoughtless Joy, Adv. 19. Launces. See Lances. Laureate. The laureate wreath, that Cecil wore Inst. 84. Laurel. Own'd ... his quiver and his laurel ... no protection. L. S. 95. Laurelled. The laurell'd Triumph and the sculptured Carr; Prop." 34. P. P. 68. Laves. Fields, that cool Ilissus laves, Lavishes. Instruction . . . idly lavishes her Stores, E. G. 14. Lavishly. The sweets of kindness lavishly indulg'd Agr. 73. Law. "Lord ! sister," says Physic to Law, C. C. 5. "I don't know," says Law, C. C. ii. Lawful. Not all that tempts . . . is lawful prize, Ca/41. Lawless 73 Lessen Lawless. As lawless force from confidence will grow E. G. 98. Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: Prop? 8. Lawn. th' expanse below ... of lawn . . . survey, Eton 7. meet the sun upon the upland lawn. El. 100. Nor up the lawn, nor at the wood El. 112. the high brow of yonder hanging lawn. El. Mas. 116. I trod your level lawn, Inst. 31. While to retain the envious Lawn she tries, Prop. 3 23. Laws. justify the laws of Jove. P. P. 47. measured Laws and philosophic Ease E. G. 40. th' inferior laws that rule our clay: E. G. 80. Who taught this vast machine its steadfast laws, Prop. 2 17. Lay. Dread goddess, lay thy chast'ning hand! Adv. 34. Temper'd to thy warbled lay. P. P. 26. Vocal no more, . . . To . . . soft Llewellyn's lay, Bard 28. Approach and read . . . the lay, El. 115. Bursts on my ear th' indignant lay: Inst. 14. Join with glad voice the loud symphonious lay. Inst. 88. Conan's name, my lay, rehearse, Conan 1. As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, Stat. 1 26. She . . . gives the Lay to flow Prop? 6. the whilst I slumb'ring lay, Dante 26. Lazy. And what Bootes' lazy waggon tires; Prop? 36. Lea. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. Lead. The paths of glory lead but to the grave. El. 36. And passages, that lead to nothing. L. S. 8. Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 77. Leaden. With leaden eye, that loves the ground, Adv. 28. Thy leaden segis 'gainst our ancientfoes? Ign. 14. Leader. by you Mark'd for their leader: Agr. 113. Leads, steep . . . That leads to Hela's drear abode. din 4. Bentley leads her sister-art along, Bent. 3. nature . . . leads the general song: Vic. 20. where rosy Pleasure leads, Vic. 37. road That to the grotto leads, Tasso 38. Leaning. leaning from her golden cloud The venerable Marg'ret see! Inst. 65. Learn. Learn the tenour of our song. F. S. 58. Nor am I yet to learn Agr. 56. Learned. she learn 'd to melt at others' woe. Adv. 16. Their sober wishes never learn 'd to stray; El. 74. Least. at least there are who know Agr. 15. Leave. their airy dance They leave, Spring 40. leave us leisure to be good. Adv. 20. Leave me unbless'd, unpitied, here to mourn: Bard 102. Leave me, leave me to repose. Odin 50, 58, 72. Then I leave thee to repose. Odin 80. -j-Leave, and lose it, — oh the pain! Rond.4, 12, 20, 28, 36. Leaves, leaves the world to darkness and to me. El. 4. Led. by lonely contemplation led, El. 95; Mas. 79. My grave Lord-Keeper led the Brawls; L. S. 11. and down the steep he led Tasso 43. Leeche's. See Leech's. Leech's. nor the leeche's Care, Prop? 93. Left. Left their Parnassus for the Latian plains. P. P. 78. Left the warm precincts of the . . . day, El. 87. But that they left the door a-jarr, L. S. 74. But left a spell upon the table. L. S. 80. She felt the wound she left behind, Clerke 8. But left church and state to Charles Townshend Char. 6. •j-Then have left, to love anew: Rond. 7. Legions. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 108. Leisure. leave us leisure to be good. Adv. 20. Length. His listless length . . . would he stretch, El. 103. See the Wretch, ... At length repair his vigour lost, Vic. 47. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso I. What length of sea remains, Tasso 31. Lent. had her wanton son Lent us his wings, Agr. 190. Less. Less pleasing when possest; Eton 42. where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. Four, not less brave, That in Armenia quell Agr. no. When, less averse, and yielding to Desires, 21. far less shall be Our Suffering, Lessen. distant warblings lessen on my ear, Prop.- Dante 65. Bard 133. Lessening 74 Light Lessening. The . . . tide, that drowns her lessening lands, E. G. 61. lessening from the dazzled sight, Melts into air Vic. 15. Let. Let us go, and let us fly, F. S. 26. Let me, let me sleep again. Odin 34. Let not Ambition mock their . . . toil, El. 29. Nor . . . Let painted Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train Inst. 8. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. Let him feel Before he sees me. Agr. 163. Let me not fall alone; but crush his pride, Agr. 186. let the Muse admire, Bent. 2. Now let him sleep in peace Child 6. Let him stand forth Stat. 1 3. yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 20. Wars hand to hand with Cynthia let me wage. Prop. 1 4. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop. 2 9. Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop. 2 15. Prop. 3 70. Prop. 3 76. Ign. 24. the quicker let me die: let her ever my Desires control, Lethargic. Lethargic nods upon her ebon throne, Lethean. dews Lethean through the land dispense Ign. 17. Level. I trod your level lawn, Inst. 31. Lewd. and his eyes are so lewd ! C. C. 8. Liberal. Owen . . . Lord of . . . Liberal hand, Owen 8. Thy liberal heart, . . . The flow'r unheeded shall descry, Inst. 71. Who had such liberal power Agr. 89. Liberty. constraint To sweeten liberty: Eton 34 Lo! liberty and death are mine. 2?ar<f Lett. 3 142 empty shade Of long-forgotten liberty: Agr. 44 say we sound The trump of liberty; Agr. 122 shake 'em at the name of liberty, Agr. 132 Against thee, liberty and Agrippina: Agr. 152 The rough abode of want and liberty, E. G. 97 Libya's. dauntless goes O'er Libya's deserts E. G. jj. Lick. With a lick of court white-wash, and pious gri- mace, C. C. 2. Lictor. Alone, unguarded and without a lictor; Agr. 5. Lids. she seem to close Her languid Lids, Prop. 3 18. Lie. Quench'd in dark clouds of slumber lie P. P. 23. On dreary Arvon's shore they lie, Bard 35. Under a tea-cup he might lie, L. S. 67. The prophet of Bethel, we read, told a lie: C. C. 27. Where lie th' eternal fountains of the deep, Prop. 2 24. Lies. Low on his funeral couch he lies! Bard 64. Here, . . . lies A child, Child I. Here lies Edmund Keene Ep. Keene 1. Here lies Mrs. Keene Mrs. Keene 1. Lieu. In lieu of penitence, and vain remorse, Agr. 179. Life. Drink life and fragrance P. P. 6. the cool sequester 'd vale of life El. 75. Through various life I have pursued Agr. 54. From his broad bosom life and verdure flings E. G. 102. To local symmetry and life awake! Bent. 8. The strength and harmony of Life. Vic. 44. With life, with memory, and with love. Clerke 16. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. Then his character, Phyzzy, — his morals — his life — C. C. 13. were of his Life the Pride; Prop? 107. Life's. The Gay . . . flutter thro' life's little day, Spring 36. either Pole, and Life's remotest Bounds, E. G. 25. Lifts, redning Phoebus lifts his golden Fire : West 2. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3. Light. See also Gospel-light. The spirits pure, the slumbers light, Eton 49. Light they disperse, and with them go Adv. 21. Frisking light in frolic measures; P. P. 31. purple light of Love. P. P. 41. blasted with excess of light, P. P. 101. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bar d 40. Thou the deeds of light shalt know; Odin 39. Rich windows that exclude the light, L. S. 7. Light golden Showers of Plenty E. G. 18. By reason's light on resolution's wings, E. G. 75. dazzle with a luxury of light. Bent. 24. Melts into air and liquid light. Vic. 16. When you rise from your Dinner as light as be- fore, Couplet 1. With double light it beam'd against the day: Stat. 1 27. The uncertain Crescent gleams a sickly light. Tasso 48. Proud of its diamond dies, and luxury of light. Tasso 70. with silver light Relumes her crescent Orb Prop? 21. Phoebus' Son recall'd Androgeon to the Light. Prop? 84. what scant Light That . . . Tower admitted Dante 22. ■j-Light to them the parting knell: Rond. 23. Lighten 75 Little Lighten. Let majesty . . . lighten from thy eye: Agr. 146. Lightly. Some lightly o'er the current skim, Spring 28. little Footsteps lightly print the Ground. El. Pem. 120; Mas. 140. And lightly . . . Scatters his freshest, tenderest green. Vic. 7. fLightly lambent o'er their frame, Rond. 22. Lightnings. light 'nings of his eye. P. P. 24. Like. See Dove-like, Proteus-like. Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air Bard 20. woeful-wan, like [as, Mas.] one forlorn, El. 107. creased, like dogs-ears, in a folio. L. S. 68. 'T is like, thou hast forgot, Agr. 33. a heart like mine, -itfgr. 49- a call, Like mine, might serve ... to wake Agr. 103. Like old Sesostris with barbaric pride; Ign. 37. *T is just like the picture in Rochester's book; C. C. 12. Is as like as two pease, Satire 14. Is as like as two beans; Satire 16. Follows them like a spaniel; Satire 26. Is of the like tenet; Satire 28. Like the rest of the Dons. Satire 34. f and thoughts Like Butterflies, Ode 45. ■{•Not like yon Dowager deprest with years; Ch. Cr. 6. fLike Punch, he peeps, Ch. Cr. 30. fLike Perch or Pike, Ch. Cr. 39. ■{■hangs like Pear or Plum, Ch. Cr. 40. fin shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. Likeness. Ne'er again his likeness see; F. S. 46. Lilies. Great Edward, with the lilies on his brow Inst. 39. Limbs. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness ? Agr. 96. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop. 3 10. These miserable Limbs with Flesh you cloath'd; Dante 67. Limits. The limits of their little reign, Eton 36. Beyond the limits of a vulgar fate, P. P. 122. Line. See also Briton-line. weave ... the tissue of thy line. Bardtfi. born of Arthur's line Bard Lett. 2 116. Mightiest of a mighty line — Odin 83. The massy sceptre o'er thy slumb'ring line? Ign. 16. could they catch . . . his unerring line; Bent. 14. pride of noble line. Stat. 1 25. Lineaments. in thy lineaments we trace A Tudor's fire, Inst. 69. Lines. in these lines their artless tale relate; El. 94. wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. My lines a secret sympathy Bent. 26. She is my Genius, she inspires the Lines; Prop. 3 4. fin ductile Lines of Foolery: Ode 40. Linger. they linger yet, Avengers of their native land : Bard 45. linger in the gloomy Walks of Fate: El. Mas. 80. rhymes that us'd to linger on, Bent. 9. Lingering. In lingering Lab'rinths creep, P. P. 70. one longing ling'ring look El. 88. In ling'ring pain, in death resign'd, Clerke MS. 9. Lingers. Where willowy Camus lingers with delight! Inst. 29. Link. Chains . . . Wreath'd in many a golden link: Hoel 15. Linnet. The captive linnet which enthral? Eton 27. Lion-port. Her [A, MS.] lyon-port, her [an, MS.] awe-com- manding face, Bard 11 7. Lips. Unwilling I my lips unclose: Odin 49. Now my weary lips I close; Odin 57, 71. the griesly Fellon raised His Gore-dyed Lips, Dante 2. Liquid. float amid the liquid noon: Spring 27. The liquid language of the skies: Inst. 56. Melts into air and liquid light, Vic. 16. Lisp. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. Listening. Th' applause of list'ning senates El. 61. Listens. nods his hoary head, and listens to the rhyme. Inst. 26. Listless. His listless length . . . would he stretch, El. 103. Littered. And foxes stunk and litter'd in St. Paul's. View 24. Little. how little are the Proud, Spring 19. flutter thro' life's little day, Spring 36. The limits of their little reign, Eton 36. The little victims play! Eton 52. Stretch'd forth his little arms, P. P. 88. The little Tyrant of his fields El. 58. little Footsteps lightly print the Ground. El. Pem. 120 ; Mas. 140. He little knew L. S. 77. Their tears, their little triumphs o'er, Inst. 48. To warm their little Loves the Birds complain: West 12. Their little wants, their low desires refine, E. G. 82. Live 76 Longing A little Verse my All that shall remain; Prop? 101. They wept, and first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 55, fSome spin away their little lives Ode 39. {gratefully they pay Their little Songs, Ode 52. {Rests in Retirement, little Rural R; Ch. Cr. 54. Live. Spite of danger he shall live. F. S. 35. in our Ashes live their wonted Fires. El. 92. And I, . . . That live to weep Hoel 24. ■(•Whose influence first bid it live. Ode 54. Lived. See also Short-lived. he liv'd unknown To fame, or fortune; Agr. 38. He lived, while she was kind; Prop. 3 108. Lively. And lively chear of vigour born; Eton 47. Lives. Rubellius lives, And Sylla has his friends, Agr. 99. Here lives Harry Vane, lmpr. Vane 1. j-Some spin away their little lives Ode 39. ■(■Remote from cities lives Ch. Cr. 55. Living. The living Throne, the saphire-blaze, P. P. 99. wak'd to extasy the living lyre. El. 48. Scythia breath'd the living Cloud of War; E. G. 47. o'er the living scene Scatters . . . green. Vic. 7. Sulphureous veins and liveing silver shine, Tasso 59. Llewellyn's. Vocal no more, . . . To . . . soft Llewellyn's lay, Bard 28. Lo. Lo! where the rosy-bosom'd Hours, Spring 1. Lo, in the vale of years Eton 81. Lo, Poverty, to fill the band, Eton 88. Edward, lo! . . . Half of thy heart we consecrate. Bard 97. Lo! liberty and death are mine. Bard Lett. 3 142. Lo! to be free to die, are mine. Bard Lett. 3 142. Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 77. Lo! where the silent marble weeps, . . . a mother sleeps: Clerke I. when lo! appears The wondrous Sage: Tasso II. Load. Receive a worthier load; Stat. 1 19. Loaded. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop. 3 48. Loathed. •(■Loath'd the love; and loath 'd the song; Rond. 15. Local. To local symmetry and life awake! Bent. 8. Lochlin. Lochlin plows the watry way; Owen 14. Locks. these locks no more shall know, Prop? 13. Lips, which on the clotter'd Locks ... he wiped, Dante 2. Lofty. 'T was on a lofty vase's side, Cat 1. Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. Build to him the lofty verse, Conan 2. Nor lofty Carthage struggleing with her Fate. Prop? 40. Lok. Till Lok has burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. London's. Ye Towers of Julius, London's lasting shame, Bard 87. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; View 22. Lone. flives in lone Retreat; Ch. Cr. 55. Lonely. By Night and lonely Contemplation led El. Mas. 79. by lonely contemplation led, El. 95. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. Along the lonely vale of days? Clerke 12. Long. See also Side-long. He wound with Toilsome march his long array. Bard 12. Long Years of havock urge their destined course, Bard 8 5. warblings . . . That lost in long futurity expire. Bard 134. long pursues, with fruitless yell, Odin 11. long of yore to sleep was laid Odin 19. Long on these mould'ring bones Odin 31. Long her strains in sorrow steep: F. S. 47. On her shadow long and gay Lochlin plows Owen 13. this long deserted shade. El. Mas. 112. With . . . aprons long they hid their armour, L. S. 38. And mitred fathers in long order go: Inst. 38. the Praetorian camp have long rever'd Agr. 117. See the Wretch, that long has tost Vic. 45. Fearless in long excursion loves to glide, Tasso 21. Long as of youth the joyous hours remain, Prop? 1. from that auspicious Night Dates the long Iliad Prop? 26. May the long Thirst of Tantalus allay, Prop? 89. Nor long endur'd the Chase: Dante 37. •(•Long to seek a mutual heart, Rond. 2, 10, 18, 26, 34. Long-drawn. through the long-drawn isle and fretted vault El. 39. Long-expected. Phlegyas the long-expected play began, Stat. 1 32. Long-expecting. the long-expecting flowers, Spring 3. Long-forgotten. empty shade Of long-forgotten liberty: Agr. 44. Longing. one longing ling'ring look El. 88. And struggles to elude my longing Eyes, Prop? 24. Long-lost 77 Loved Long-lost. No more our long-lost Arthur we bewail. Bard 109. To Chiron Phoenix owed his long-lost Sight, Prop? 83. Long-resounding. With . . . long-resounding pace. P. P. 106. Long-winded. And guard us from long-winded Lubbers, L. S. 142. Look. Still as they run they look behind, Eton 38. Such a sheep-biting look, C. C. 6. but methinks for his look, 'T is just like the picture C.C. 11. In brief whate'er she do, or say, or look, Prop. 3 27. Looked. So Helen look'd, So her white neck redin'd, Agr. 194. Thus Etough look'd; Toph. 1. Looks. Presumptuous Maid! with looks [eyes, Whar.] intent Cat 25. And Ignorance with looks profound, Inst. 3. looks ever dejected — Am. Lines 5. Loom. bending o'er th' accursed loom Bard 95. Haste, the loom of Hell prepare, F. S. 2. Glitt'ring lances are the loom, F. S. 5. Loose. In loose numbers wildly sweet P. P. 61. Loose his beard, and hoary hair Stream'd, Bard 19. the song-thrush there Scatters his loose notes Birds 2. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? 11. give loose to Utterance, and to Tears. Dante 9. Lord. On Tbracia's hills the Lord of War P. P. 17. Mighty Victor, mighty Lord! Bard 63. Owen . . . Lord of every regal art, Owen 7. Henry . . . the majestic lord, Inst. 46. cast me forth in duty to their Lord. Agr. 157. "Lord ! sister," says Physic to Law, C. C. 5. Here lies Edmund Keene Lord Bishop of Chester, Ep. Keene 1 . The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat. 2 13. Lord-keeper. My grave Lord-Keeper led the Brawls; L. S. 11. Lore. thy rigid lore . . . many a year she bore: Adv. 13. Lose. ■{■Leave, and lose it, — oh the pain! Rond. 4, 12, 20, 28, 36. Loss. Long his loss shall Eirin weep, F. S. 45. Lost. See Long-lost. Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. Dear lost companions of my tuneful art, Bard 39. That lost in long futurity expire. Bard 134. Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. At length repair his vigour lost, Vic. 47. Redeem, what Crassus lost, Prop? 54. Lot. Their lot forbad: nor circumscrib'd alone El. 65. Loud. Join with glad voice the loud symphonious lay. Inst. 88. Weddell attends your call, . . . and Delaval the loud. Com. Lines I. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop? 47. Love. pineing Love shall waste their youth, Eton 65. Teach me to love and to forgive, Adv. 46. purple light of Love. P. P. 41. Fierce War, and faithful Love, Bard 126. cross'd in hopeless love. El. 108. That wept her bleeding Love, Inst. 42. they love not aconite. Agr. 21. My love, my fears for him, Agr. 181. love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. With life, with memory, and with love. Clerke 16. Could love, and could hate, Char. 3. From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, Williams 7, Spare the honour of my love. Song 12. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Stat. 1 9. Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop. 1 1. Age step 'twixt love and me, Prop? 12. Be love my youth's pursuit, Prop. 2 52. Yet would the Tyrant Love permit me raise Prop? 31. To die is glorious in the Bed of Love. Prop? 64. it be my Fate to try Another Love, a Cure for every 111, but Love. Prop Love and the Fair were Prop? 107. •jto love, — and then to part, Rond. 1,9,17,25,33. ■j-'Till they loved their love away ; Rond. 6. •jThen have left, to love anew: Rond. 7. •j-And have loved their love in rhyme: Rond. 14. fLoath'd the love; and loath'd the song; Rond. 1 5. fBut their love could not be strong. Rond. 16. -f-For, too sure, they love not well. Rond. 24. Loved. Thy once loved haunt, this . . . shade. El. Mas. 112. within whose sacred cell . . . virtues lov'd to dwell. Clerke 4. Why, David lov'd catches, C. C. 24. From her loved Door Prop? 78. fSome have loved, and loved (they say) Rond. 5. f Till they loved their love away; Rond. 6. fBut, I wot, they loved not true. Rond. 8. •j-Some have lov'd, to pass the time, Rond. 13. ■(•And have loved their love in rhyme: Rond. 14. Prop." 70 , 3 ' . 3 8o. Lovely 78 Maeander's Hoel 10. Prop? 96. Lovely. He ask'd and had the lovely maid Lover. To-day the Lover walks, Lover's. 'T is ample Matter for a Lover's Book; Prop? 28. Love's. Before the Goddess' shrine we too, love's vot'ries, bend, Prop} 2. Loves. With leaden eye, that loves the ground, Adv. 28. The rosy-crowned Loves are seen P. P. 28. Their feather-cinctur'd Chiefs, and dusky Loves. P. P. 62. The Red-breast loves to build El. Pern. 119; Mas. 139. groves, That contemplation loves, Inst. 28. To warm their little Loves the Birds complain: West 12. They say he 's no Christian, loves drinking and whoring, C. C. 15. Fearless in long excursion loves to glide, Tasso 21. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop? 1. ■(•Mortals he loves to prick, Ch. Cr. 32. Low. How low, how little are the Proud, Spring 19. I hear in accents low Spring 41. Low on his funeral couch he lies! Bard 64. Low the dauntless Earl is laid, F. 5. 41. Their little wants, their low desires refine, E. G. 82. low as his feet there flows A vestment Tasso 13. But yet in low and uncompleated Sounds Dante 44. Lower. Now the storm begins to lower F. S. 1. deepest shades, that dimly lower Vic. 34. Lowing. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. Lowly. shall rouse them from their lowly bed. El. 20. Loyalty. Mirrors of Saxon truth and loyalty Bar d MS. 71, Lubbers. And guard us from long-winded Lubbers, L. S. 142. Lucca. that intercepts the View Of Lucca, Dante 30. Lucid. where lucid Avon stray 'd, P. P. 85. Lull. drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds: El. 8. Lulled. Fast by th' umbrageous vale lull'd to repose, Prop? 3. Lulling. I favour her repose With lulling Notes, Prop? 19. Lulls. thy magic lulls the feather'd king P.P.zi. Lured. to be lured with smiles Agr. 18. Lurked. that thereabouts there lurk'd ... a Poet, L. S. 43. Lustre. with no other lustre, than the blood Agr. 37. catch a lustre from his genuine flame. Bent. 12. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. Luxury. heap the shrine of Luxury and Pride El. 71. dazzle with a luxury of light. Bent. 24. Proud of its diamond dies, and luxury of light. Tasso 70. Lying. And filching and lying, and Newgate-bird tricks; C. C. 17. Lyon-port. See Lion-port. Lyre. Awake, ^olian lyre, awake, P. P. 1. Awake, my lyre: P. P. MS. 1. Hark, his hands the lyre explore! P. P. 107. Oh! Lyre divine, P. P. 112, Struck the deep sorrows of his lyre. Bar d 22. wak'd to extasy the living lyre. El. 48. bids the pencil answer to the lyre. Bent. 4. Hark! 't is nature strikes the lyre, Vie. 19. Or if to Musick she the Lyre awake, Prop? 13. Maces. The Seal, and Maces, danc'd before him. L.S. 12. Machaon. The Melian's Hurt Machaon could repair, Prop? 81. Machine. Who taught this vast machine its steadfast laws, Prop? 17. Macleane. He stood as mute as poor Macleane. L. S. 120. Mad. Mad Sedition's cry profane, Inst. 5. Madam. Jesu-Maria! Madam Bridget, L. S. 133. Madding. the madding crowd's ignoble strife, El. 73. cool dictates in the madding ear Agr. 83. Made. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bard 34. 'T is of human entrails made F. S. 10. Madness. moody Madness laughing wild Eton 79. Madoc. of Madoc old He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoel 7. Maeander's. Or where Maeander's amber waves P. P. 69. Maecenas 79 Many Maecenas. And thou Mecaenas, be my second Care; Prop? 42. Magazines. the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop? 25. Maggots, f Maggots too will form and nourish; Ode 16. Magi. You bade the Magi call the dreadful powers, Agr. 64. Magic. thy magic lulls the feather 'd king P. P.n. Modred, whose magic song Made huge Plinlim- mon bow Bard 33. The power of Magick was no fable. L. S. 78. a vain tradition, As there were magic in it? Agr. 134. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat? 54. e'en Magic here must fail, Prop? 85. Magick. See Magic. Maid. See also Village-maid. Presumptuous Maid! with looks intent Cat 25. Melancholy, silent maid, Adv. 27. terrific Maid, F. S. 17. The dust of the prophetic Maid. Odin 20. No boding Maid of skill divine Art thou, Odin 84. He ask'd and had the lovely maid. Hoel 10. Mail. Helm, nor Hauberk's twisted mail, Bard 5. Main. tongue, That hush'd the stormy main: Bard 30. The river boil'd beneath, and rush'd toward the Main, Tasso 24. Maintain. An Iron-race the mountain-cliffs maintain, E. G. 88. the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop? 25. Majestic. Deep, majestic, smooth, and strong. P. P. 8. Henry . . . the majestic lord, Inst. 46. Majesty. Statesmen old In [Of, Lett. 2 ] bearded majesty, Bard 114. The thoughtless World to Majesty may bow, El. Mas. 73. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. ■f-Henry the Eighth's most monstrous majesty, Ch. Cr. 22. Make. That the soft Subject of my Song I make, Prop? 14. Making. He had not the method of making a fortune: Char. 2. Malice. Or any malice to the poultry, L. S. 124. Malignant. Malignant Fate sat by, and smil'd Cat 28. hag . . . smiles malignant on the labouring power. Stat. 1 59. Man. Such is the race of Man Spring 32. know myself a Man. Adv. 48. Fond impious Man, think'st thou, Bard 135. 'T is man alone that Joy descries Vic. 27. 'T is Willy begs, once a right proper man, Shak. 3. call'd forth all the man. Stat. 1 33. fK, as a man, with hoarser accent speaks, Ch. Cr. 47. Manes. you, ye manes of ambition's victims, Agr. 174. Mangled. That tear'st the bowels of thy mangled Mate, Bard 58. Mankind. shut the gates of mercy on mankind, El. 68. draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. Manly. Every warriors manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoel 13. Manners. Her air and all her manners shew it. L. S. 138. The manners speak the idiom of their soil. E. G. 87. Manor. To rid the manour of such vermin. L. S. 52. Manour. See Manor. Man's. Man's feeble 'race what His await, P. P. 42. Mansion. Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath ? El. 42. Mansions, from their gloomy mansions creeping L. S. 98. Mantled. See Ivy-mantled. Mantles. In peaked hoods and mantles tarnish'd, L. S. 105. Mantling. Mantling in the goblet see The pure bev'rage Odin 43. Many. With many an ardent wish, Cat 21. V Full many a sprightly race Eton 22. thy rigid lore . . . many a year she bore: Adv. 14. With many a foul and midnight murther fed, Bard 88. Girt with many a Baron bold Bard in. Weaving many a Soldier's doom, F. S. 7. Gor'd with many a gaping wound: F. 5.42. in many a mould'ring heap, El. 14. Full many a gem of purest ray serene, El. 53. Full many a flower is born El, 55. many a holy text around she strews, El. 83. with many an artful fib, L. S. 113. Wreath'd in many a golden link: Hoel 15. Many-colored 80 May P. P. Sl- Bar d 12. L. S. 69. Inst. 66. Eton 23. r T Of many a flood they view'd the secret source, I asso 51. And many a copious Narrative you '11 «* ^ and known To many a Wretch Dante 25. Many-colored. . , Waves ... her many-colour'd wings. Bard 124. Many-coloured. See Many-colored. Many-twinkling. Glance their many-twinkling feet. r. .r.35. ^ere* the silent marble weeps, . . . another AhfgTnant youth! this marble tells the «* ^ And the short Marble but preserve a Name,^ March. Hyperion's march they spy, He wound with toilsome march Marching. On the first marching of the troops Margaret. The venerable Marg'ret seel Margent. Disporting on thy margent green Margin. . .,,, A shining border round the margin roll d,^ ^ And paint the margin of the costly ^^^ Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: , ^ Maria. See Jesu-Maria. ^mariners, though shipwreck'd, dread £ land. ^TMarius' Cimbrian Wreaths would I relate, Prop. 39. Mar'k the year, and mark the night, Bard 53 . Mark where Indolence and Pride, Vtc. m. Marked. , , „, .„ Melancholy mark'd him for her own. El. 120. by you Mark'd for their leader: Agr. 113- Marking. n Marking with indignant eye uwe« 35- Marriage. , By residence, by marriage, and sore eyes ]y[a,ry ■ The drawing-room of fierce Queen Mary. Li. o. 108. Masians. . the Masians too, and those of Egypt, Agr. 115- fear'mfcht . . . have worn The mask of pru- dence! ^-4* Mass. The band around admire the mighty mass, Stat. 1 7- Emits the mass, a prelude of his might; Stat. 1 46. The ponderous mass sinks in the cleaving ground, Stat. 2 16. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. IVTsssy* The massy sceptre o'er thy slumb'ring line? Ign. 16. Master. Your helpless, old, expiring master view! BardUS. 72. Tell your master, His mother shall obey him. Agr. 2. the Master of Jesus The Master of Maudlin The Master of Sidney The Master of Trinity the Master of Keys the Master of Queen's The Master of King's The Master of Catherine The Master of Clare The Master of Christ the Master of Emmanuel The Master of Benet The Master of Pembroke The Master of Peter's The Master of St. John's TWa.stcr's. with a Master's hand, and Prophet's fire, Bard 21. heap'd his master's feet around, Owen 29. 'T is true, our master's temper natural Was fash- ion'd fair ShaL 9- Mate. . , , , ,, „ That tear'st the bowels of thy mangled Mate, Bard 58. Matter. In Britain's Isle, no matter where, L,. <a. 1. no matter What; so 't be strange, ^ r ', I7 °- 'T is ample Matter for a Lover's Book; Prop. 28. Maudlin. . The Master of Maudlin In the same dirt is dawdling; SaUre ?' ivr&y We' frolick, while 't is May. Spring 50. May, vb. _ . he yet may share the feast: Bard 79- Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest, El. 59. The thoughtless World to Majesty may bow, £/.Mas.73- some hoary-headed Swain may say, El. 97. He Perchance may heed 'em: Agr. 88. one . . may still With equal power resume Agr. 89. we may meet, ungrateful boy, we may My. H°- Where he so soon may — Agr. l6 5- Satire 5. Satire 7. Satire 9. Satire II. Satire 13. /Sar»>« 1 5- Satire 17. 5ar»V« 19- Satire 21. &tf»Ve 23. Satire 25. iS<rt;Ve 27. .StfM're 29. Satire 11. Satire 33. Mazy But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall Shak. ii. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop. 1 3- Me may Castalia's sweet recess detain, Prop} -• nor Callimachus' enervate Strain May tell of Jove, Prop? 56. may my pale Coarse be borne. Prop? 78. May the long Thirst of Tantalus allay, Prop? 89. yet if the telling may Beget Dante 6. Mazy. A thousand rills their mazy progress take: P. P. 4. Me, omitted. Mead. th' expanse below ... of mead survey, Eton 7. Mean. Why, what can the Viscountess mean? L. S. 134. Meaner. Whom meaner Beauties eye askance, L. S. 27. The meaner gems that . . . charm the sight, Bent. 22. Meanest. The meanest flowret of the vale, Vic. 49. And I, the meanest of them all, Hoel 23. Meaning. Th' unthought event disclose a whiter meaning. Agr. 71. Words ... by no meaning connected! dm. Lines 6. Means. Ah! what means yon violet flower! Song 3. Measured. Here measured Laws and philosophic Ease E. G. 40. Who measured out the year, Prop? 38. Measures. Frisking light in frolic measures; P. P. 31. In buskin'd [mystic, Lett. 2 ] measures move Bard 128. To judge of weights and measures; Agr. 41. In swifter measures animated run, Bent. 11. Meat. Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Shak. 18. Mecaenas. See Maecenas. Meditated. 'T was there he aim'd the meditated harm, Stat. 2 22. Meek. spare the meek Usurper's holy head. Bard 90. Meek Newton's self bends Inst. 25. Was fashion'd fair in meek and dove-like guise; Shak. 10. Meet. Now in circling troops they meet: P. P. 33. Blade with clattering buckler meet, F. S. 23. To meet the sun upon . . . the lawn. El. 100. with dirges meet in sad array El. Mas. 133. we may meet, ungrateful boy, Agr. 140. I will not meet its poison. Agr. 163. 81 Mercy Meets. Thy Joys no glittering female meets, Spring 45. Meinai. Backward Meinai rolls his flood; Owen 28. Melancholy. Melancholy, silent maid, Adv. 27. Melancholy mark'd him for her own. El. 120. Freedom by my side, and soft-eyed Melancholy. Inst. 34. throw A melancholy grace; Vic. 32. Where melancholy friendship bends, Williams 12. Melian's. The Melian's Hurt Machaon could repair, Prop? 81. Melissa. Melissa is her Nom de Guerre. L. 5. 35. Mellow. mellow now, now gruff, Par. on Ep. 1. Melody. •fTheir little Songs, and Melody; Ode 52. Melpomene. f buskin'd Strains, If Melpomene inspire, Ode 32. Melt. she learn'd to melt at others' woe. Adv. 16. They melt [sink, MS.], they vanish from my eyes. Bard 104. Melting. See also Ever-melting. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach declare: P. P. 36. Sweet music's melting fall, Inst. 63. Melts. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. Melts into air and liquid light. Vic. 16. Memorial. Some frail memorial , . . erected nigh, El. 78. Memory. If Mem'ry [Memory, Dods., Pern., Eg., Mas.] o'er their Tomb no Trophies raise, El. 38. The grateful memory of the good. Inst. 60. with Mem'ry to retain, E. G. 30. With life, with memory, and with lo?e. Clerke 16. Men. tell them, they are men! Eton 60. To each his suff'rings: all are men, Eton 91. Uprose the King of Men with speed, Odin I. King of Men, I know thee now; Odin 82. and men below Join with glad voice Inst. 87. new-born Pleasure brings to happier Men: West 10. ■{•Battles, Sieges, Men, and Arms, Ode 25. Mend. strive to mend A broken character View 3. E. G. 32. Mends. Their Judgment mends the Plan Mercy. shut the gates of mercy on mankind, El. 68 Mere 82 Ministers Mere. Decorum's turn'd to mere civility; L. S. 137. Merits. No farther seek his merits to disclose, El. 125. Message. The message needs no comment. Agr. 2. Met. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop? 51. Metals. And embryon metals undigested glow, Tasso 58. Meteor. Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air Bard 20. Methinks. Methinks I hear in accents low Spring 41. but methinks for his look, 'T is just like the pic- ture C. C. 11. ■f-methinks we see, Ch. Cr. 21. Method. He had not the method of making a fortune: Char. 2. Methought. I saw methought Towards Pisa's Mount, Dante 28. Mewed. She mew'd to ev'ry watry God, Cat 32. Midday. ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baix. Agr. 159. Middle. Transparent birdlime form'd the middle, L. S. 83. Midnight. With many a foul and midnight murther fed, Bard 88. Comus, and his midnight crew, Inst. 2. The powerful Mixture and the midnight Spell; Prop. 3 86. Midst. In the midst a Form divine! Bard 115. And in the midst a spacious arch appears. Tasso 42. 'Midst. 'Midst the tide Cat 13. Mien. With watchful eye and dauntless mien, Inst. 90. vigorous he seem'd in years, Awful his mien, Tasso 13. Might. See also Mought. the rod of empire might have sway'd, El. 47. Under a tea-cup he might lie, L. S. 67. all that Groom might urge L. S. MS. 116. Yet hop'd, that he might save his bacon: L. S. 126. fear might then have worn The mask Agr. 48. a call, Like mine, might serve ... to wake Agr. 103. I might remind my mistress that her nod Agr. 107. nations own'd her unresisted might, Ign. 29. The energy of Pope they might efface, Bent. 15. Owls might have hooted View MS. 23. Had I but the torrent's might, Hoel I. Emits the mass, a prelude of his might ; Stat. 1 46, Oh, might that envied Happiness be mine! Prop? 67. fas might a King become, Ch. Cr. 49. Mightiest. [The, MS.], Mightiest of a [the, MS.] mighty line — Odin 83. Mighty. To Him the mighty Mother did unveil P. P. 86. Mighty Victor, mighty Lord! Bard 63. Mightiest of a mighty line — din 83. Big with hosts of mighty name, Owen 9. This mighty emperor, this dreaded hero, Agr. 93. The band around admire the mighty mass, Stat. 1 7. True to the mighty arm that gave it force, Stat.' 11. Milder. Thy milder influence impart, Adv. 42. A milder Warfare I in Verse display; Prop? 61. Millions. Rous'd by the shout of millions: Agr. 143. Milton. Some mute inglorious Milton [Tully, Mas.] here may rest, El. 59. Milton struck the deep-ton 'd shell, Inst. 23. Milton's. in Shakespeare's or in Milton's page, Bent. 19. Mimic. And mimic desolation covers all. View 16. Mind. The vulturs of the mind, Eton 62. Th' unconquerable Mind, P. P. 65. Profane thy inborn royalty of mind: Inst. 81. Opinion tinge the varied Mind, E. G. 27. Her latest agony of mind Gierke MS. 10. His mind each Muse, . , . adorn *d Williams 3. Mindful. mindful of th' unhonour'd Dead, El. 93; Mas. 77. Minds. how oft in weak and sickly minds Agr. 72. Minds of the antique cast, Agr. 126. Mine. To triumph, and to die, are mine. Bard 142. a heart like mine, . . . that glows Agr. 49. a call, Like mine, might serve belike Agr. 103. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. Dryden's harmony submit to mine. Bent. 16. Oh, might that envied Happiness be mine! Prop? 67. Minerals. Further they pass, where ripening minerals flow, Tasso 57. Ministers. The Ministers of human fate, Eton 56. Mirrors 83 More Mirrors, Mirrors of Saxon truth and loyalty BardMS. 71. Mirth. Flush'd with mirth and hope they burn: Hoel 19. Mischance. Brush'd by the hand of rough Mischance, Spring 38. Miserable. These miserable Limbs with Flesh you cloath'd; Dante 67. Misery. and Misery not thine own. Adv. MS. 8. He gave to Mis'ry all he had, El. 123. Behind tbfc steps that Misery treads, Vic. 39. Here, . . . secure from misery, lies A child, Child 1. Gave not to know their Sum of Misery, Dante 43 . Misfortune's. black Misfortune's baleful train! Eton 57. Smiles on past Misfortune's brow . . . Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 29. Missed. One morn I [we, Mas.] miss'd him El. 109. Mista. Mista black, F. S. 17. Mistake. Condemns her fickle Sexe's fond Mistake, Prop. 3 73. Mistress. I might remind my mistress that her nod Agr. 107. A moment's patience, 'gentle Mistress [Mistris, Lett. 4 ] Anne: Shaft. 1. the Mistress of my faithful breast, Prop. 3 71. Mistris. See Mistress. Mitred. And mitred fathers in long order go: Inst. 38. With servilejimper nod the mitred head. Toph. 4. Mix. All stones . . . mix attemper 'd in a various day; Tasso 66. Mixture. The powerful Mixture and the midnight Spell; Prop. 3 86. Mnestheus'. By Phlegyas warn'd, and fir'd by Mnestheus' fate, Stat. 2 4. Mock. They mock the air with idle state. Bard 4. Let not Ambition mock their . . . toil, El. 29. walls that seem to mock my shame, Agr. 156. ■(■But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Mocks. eye, That mocks the tear it forc'd Eton 77. Modest. With modest pride . . . The laureate wreath, . . . she brings, Inst. 83. Modesty. fond reluctance, yielding modesty, Agr. 197. Modred. Mountains, ye mourn in vain Modred, Bardy^. Moiety. ■(Then for a Moiety of the Year Ode 41. Molest. such as . . . Molest her ancient solitary reign. El. 12. a bad face which did sadly molest her. Mrs. Keene 2. Momentary. A momentary bliss bestow, Eton 16. Break out, and flash a momentary day, Ign. 20. Moment's. A moment's patience, gentle Mistress Anne: Shak. 1. Mona. The Dragon-Son of Mona Stands; Owen 20. Monarch. Sword, that once a Monarch bore, F. S. 15. love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. Monarch's. Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59. Monarchs. a team of harness'd monarchs bend Ign. 38. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop. 3 48. Monasteries. Unpeopled monast Vies [palaces, MS.] View 15. Monster-brood. Earth's monster-brood stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop. 2 41. Monstrous. ■j-Henry the Eighth's most monstrous majesty, Ch. Cr. 22. Monthly. That monthly waning hides her paly fires, Prop. 2 20. Moody. moody Madness laughing wild Eton 79. Moon. The mopeing owl does to the moon complain El. 10. Mopeing. See Moping. Moping. The mopeing owl does to the moon complain El. 10. Moralist. Poor moralist! and what art thou? Spring 43. teach the rustic moralist to die. El. 84. Morals. Then his character, Phyzzy, — his morals — C. C. 13. More. More hideous than their Queen: Eton 84. No more; where ignorance is bliss, Eton 99. But ah! 'tis heard no more — P.P. ill. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 17. No more I weep. Bard 43. Morn 84 Mountain-structures No more our long-lost Arthur we bewail. Bard 109. The . . . horn, No more shall rouse them El. 20. no more the blazing hearth shall burn, El. 21. more to Innocence their Safety owe El. Mas. 75. No more, with Reason and thyself at Strife, _EZ.Mas.85. Their human passions now no more, Inst. 49. not the basilisk More deadly to the sight, Agr. 161. beguil'd With more elusive speed the . . . sight Agr. 1^1. I . . . weep the more because I weep in vain. West 14. The hues of Bliss more brightly glow, Vic. 41. you have eat just enough and no more. Couplet 2. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, Stat. 1 13. Art it requires, and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. When my changed head these locks no more shall op? 13. Prop? 96. know, to-morrow is no more; for three days more I grop'd Dante 77. that heard me now no more: Dante 80. fTwenty more in Embrio dye; Ode 38. fNo more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch.Cr. 11. Morn. That fly th' approach of morn. Eton 50. Gone to salute the rising Morn [Day, MS.]. Bar d 70. Fair laughs the Morn, Bard 71. The breezy call of incense-breathing Morn, El. 17. One morn I miss'd him El. 109. on her bridal morn Inst. 41. Now the golden Morn aloft Waves . . . wing, Vic. 1. The Morn had scarce commenc'd, when I awoke: Dante 41. e'er the sixth Morn Had dawn'd, Dante 74. Morning. House . . . From whence one fatal morning is- sues L. S. 22. To hail their Fitzroy's festal morning come; Inst. 54. Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. To start from short slumbers, and wish for the morning — Am. Lines 3 . Mornings. In vain to me the smileing Mornings shine, West 1. Morrow. Their raptures . . . No yesterday, nor morrow know; Vic. 26. Mortal. Mortal, thou that hear'st the tale; F. S. 57. raise the mortal to a height divine. E. G. 83. Mortals. -|-Mortals he loves to prick, Ch. Cr. 32. Mortimer. "To arms!" cried Mortimer, Bard 14. Moss-grown. the rude and moss-grown beech Spring 13. By the moss-grown pile he sate; Odin 18. Most. ■j-Her daughters deck'd most daintily I see, Ch. Cr. 3. •j-Henry the Eighth's most monstrous majesty, Ch. Cr. 22, Mother. To Him the mighty Mother did unveil P. P. 86. Mother of the giant-brood! Odin 86. Rummage his Mother, pinch his Aunt, L. S. 59. Tell your master, His mother shall obey him. Agr. 3. gratitude which Nero To such a mother owes; Agr. 58. If the son reign, the mother perishes. Agr. 67. Perish (you cried) the mother! Agr. 68. the daughter, sister, wife, And mother of their Caesars. Agr. 119. A friend, a wife, a mother sleeps: Clerke 2. Mother-church. Our mother-church, with half-averted sight, Blush'd Toph. 5. Mother's. sink the traitor in his mother's ruin. Agr. 187. Motionless. mute we sate, And motionless; Dante 71. Moilght. See also Might. such as mought entrance find within Dante 60. Mould. f And, springing from the sluggish mould, Ode 47. Mouldering. Long on these mould'ring bones Odin 31. heaves the turf in many a mould'ring heap, El. 14. Here mouldering fanes and battlements arise, View 13. Mount. Yet shall he mount, P. P. 121. heart . . . will mount undaunted, Agr. 52. I saw methought Towards Pisa's Mount, Dante 29. Mountain. Where each old poetic Mountain P. P. 73. Mountain-cliffs. An Iron-race the mountain-cliffs maintain, E. G. 88. Mountain-high. When mountain-high the waves disparted rise; Tasso 40. Mountain's. headlong from the mountain's height Bard 143. Mountains. *haggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. Mountains, ye mourn in vain Bard 32. Mountain-structures. No Mountain-Structures in my Verse should rise, Prop? 36. Mounts 85 Mute Mounts. -f-H mounts to Heaven, and H descends to Hell. Ch. Cr. 24. Mourn. Mountains, ye mourn in vain Bardyi. Leave me unbless'd, unpitied, here to mourn: Bard 102. I fruitless mourn to him that cannot hear, W est 13. To mourn the Glories of his sevenfold Stream, Prop. 3 50. Or thou dost mourn to think, Dante 46. Mourning. A train of mourning Friends attend his Pall, Prop. 3 97. Move. move The bloom . . . and purple light P. P. 40. In buskin'd [mystic, Lett. 2 ] measures move Bard 128. The powerful pothooks did so move him,L. 5. 86. Cease, my doubts, my fears to move, Song n. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop? 30. Move through the Sacred Way and vainly threat, Prop. 3 52. Moved. Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, L. S. 15. So mov'd the Seer, Tasso 23. Mow. thro' the kindred squadrons mow their way. Bard 86. Did the sword of Conan mow The crimson har- vest Conan 9. Mr. Fame, in the shape of Mr. Purt, . . . Had told, L. 5.41. Mrs. Here lies Mrs. Keene Mrs. Keene 1. I'll be Mrs. Twitcher myself. C. C. 32 Much. much I hope these walls alone -Agr. 22. Much have I borne from canker'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. Mud. draws his humid train of mud: Ign. 4. Mungo's. Nor Mungo's [Shelburne's, MS.], Rigby's, Brad- shaw's friendship vain, View 18. Murder. With many a foul and midnight murther fed, Bard 88. If murder cries for murder, Agr. 185. Murdered. Henry . . . The murder'd saint Inst. 46. Murderous. To seize their prey the murth'rous band! Eton 59. Murmur. The busy murmur glows! Spring 24. Murmured. Murmur'd deep a 6olemn sound: P. P. 76. Murmuring. While some . . . Their murm'ring labours ply Eton 32. Murmurs. Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breath; Bard 26. in murmurs dread, Odin Whar. 23. Thrice pronounc'd, in murmurs dread, Odin MS. 23. Murther. See Murder. Murtherous. See Murderous. Muse. With me the Muse shall sit, Spring 16. has he giv'n in vain the heav'nly muse? P. P. 48. The Muse has broke the twilight-gloom P. P. 56. their years, spelt by th' unletter'd muse, El. 81. let the Muse admire, Bent. 2. His mind each Muse, . . . adorn'd Williams 3. no other Muse I know, Prop. 3 5. The fruitful Muse from that auspicious Night Prop. 3 25. Thee too the Muse should consecrate to Fame, Muse's. Such forms, as glitter in the Muse's ray, P. P. 119. incense kindled at the Muse's flame. El. 72. Nor Envy . , . Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 10. Muses. The Muses, . . . Convey'd him L. S. 70. Thou Seat of the Muses! Satire 4. Muses'. I'd in the ring knit hands, and joyn the Muses' dance. Prop. 2 6. Music. the rich stream of music winds P. P. 7. Mute was the musick of the air, Vic. 23. Or if to Musick she the Lyre awake, Prop. 3 13. Musick. See Music. Music's. Sweet music's melting fall, Inst. 63. Musings. By sympathetic musings here delayed, El. Mas. 1 10. Must. Pikes must shiver, javelins sing, F. S. 22. Soon a King must bite the ground. F. S. Whar. 44. I must be cautious, must be silent, Agr. 85. Must sick'ning virtue fly the tainted ground? E.G. 7 i. where unwearied sinews must be found E. G. 90. e'en Magic here must fail, Prop? 85. Mute. Mute, but to the voice of Anguish? P. P. 72. Some mute inglorious Milton El. 59. He stood as mute as poor Macleane. L. S. 120. these walls alone And the mute air Agr. 23. Mute was the musick of the air, Vic. 23. That Day, and yet another, mute we sate, Dante 70. Mutina 86 Need Mutina. Here Mutina from flames and famine free, Prop? 43. Mutter. Yet something he was heard to mutter, L. S. 121. Muttered. Her mutter 'd requiems, BardMS. 74. barb'rous rites Of mutter 'd charms, Agr. 63. Muttering. Mutt'ring his wayward fancies El. 106. Mutual. mutual Wishes, mutual Woes endear E. G. 36. ■j-Long to seek a mutual heart, Ron J. 2, 10, 18, 26, 34. My, omitted. Myra. fBut if my Myra cruel be Ode 29. Myra's. fWith Myra's charms In Episode, Ode 27. Myriads. blue-eyed Myriads from the Baltic coast. E. G. 51. Myself. know myself a Man. Adv. 48. I'll be Mrs. Twitcher myself. C. C. 32. Me from myself the soft Enchantress stole; Prop? 75. Mysterious. Euphrates' font, and Nile's mysterious head. Tasso 56. Mystic. In mystic measures move Bard Lett. 2 128. Name. Big with hosts of mighty name, Owen 9. Their name . . . spelt by th' unletter'd muse, £/.8i. shake 'em at the name of liberty, Agr. 132. Conan's name, my lay, rehearse, Conan 1. Redeem, what Crassus lost, and vindicate his name. Prop? 54. weave thy ever-faithful Name. Prop. 3 54. And the short Marble but preserve a Name, Prop? 100. Names. often calling On their dear Names, Dante 80. Nancy. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. Nanny. For thee fat Nanny sighs, Com. Lines 6. Narrative. many a copious Narrative you'll see Prop? 29. Narrow. Each in his narrow cell for ever laid, El. 15. Beyond the confines of our narrow world: Tasso 34. Nathless. The Anguish, that unutter'd nathless wrings Dante 5. Nation's. read their hist'ry in a nation's eyes, EI. 64. Nations. warms the nations with redoubled ray. Bard 138. Fierce nations own'd her unresisted might, Ign. 29. o'er the trembling Nations from afar E. G. 46. In vain the nations with officious fear Stat. 1 56. Native. Avengers of their native land: Bard 46. on his native sands The Dragon-Son . . . stands; Owen 19. the native darkness of the sky; Ign. 8. sees far off . . . Her native plains, E. G. 63. his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 35. With native spots and artful labour gay, Stat? 25. Natives. To chear the shiv'ring Natives dull abode. P. P. 57. Natural, our master's temper natural Was fashion'd fair Shak. 9. Nature. See also Good-nature. the voice of Nature cries, El. 91. the growing Powers Of Nature E. G. 14. where the face of nature laughs around, E. G. 70. Hark! 't is nature strikes the lyre, Fie. 19. Yet Nature could not furnish out the feast, View 1 1. j-Nature in my Soul implanted: Ode 2. Nature's. In thy green lap was Nature's Darling laid, P. P. 84. Alone in nature's wealth array'd, Hoel 9. Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop? 15. Near. wand'ring near her secret bow'r, El. 11. near his fav'rite tree; El. no. Who prowl'd the country far and near, L. 5. 45. Near the source whence Pleasure flows; Vic. 54. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop? 105. •j-Great D draws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. 1. Nearer. His . . . Sons with nearer Course surrounds E. G. 24. Neck. So her white neck reclin'd, Agr. 195. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal hon- our deck, Hoel 13. Necks. With necks in thunder cloath'd, P. P. 106. Nectar. drink Nectar that the bees produce, Hoel 17. Need. Need we the influence of the northern star E. G. 68. No common helps, no common guide ye need, Tasso 29. Needs 87 Nightingale Needs. The message needs no comment. Agr. 2. Ne'er. See also Never. one false step is ne'er retrieved, Cat 38. Ne'er again his likeness see; F. S. 46. Who ne'er shall comb his raven-hair, Odin 66. Knowledge . . . her ample page . . . did ne'er unroll; El. 50. He ne'er was for a conj'rer taken. L. S. 128. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child 3. Neglected. Perhaps in this neglected spot is laid El. 45. Glad I revisit thy neglected reign, Ign. 5. Negligent. To censure cold, and negligent of fame, Bent. 10. Neighboring. Earl Goodwin trembled for his neighbouring sand; View 6. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. Nereid. no Nereid stirr'd : Cat 34. Nero. the debt of gratitude which Nero . . . owes; *g r - 57- ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baiae. Agr. 159. Nerves. wont to stem With stubborn nerves the tide, Agr. 109. string our nerves and steel our hearts E. G. 69. Brac'd all his nerves, and every sinew strung; Stat? 7. Nervous. Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Stat. 1 43. Nesimachus'. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, Stat. 1 13. Nestor. The Bishop of Chester, Tho' wiser than Nestor Ext. Keene 2. Never. See also Ne'er. sorrow never comes too late, Eton 96. Yet never can he fear a vulgar fate, P.P.MS. 122. never shall Enquirer come To break Odin 88. Never, till substantial Night Has reassum'd Odin 91. Their sober wishes never learn 'd to stray; El. 74. A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child 4. Never hang down your head, C. C. 31. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. New. See also Ever-new. For ever gone — yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. the new Fragrance of the breathing Rose, E. G. 56. Art he invokes new horrors still to bring. View 12. Swoll'n with new force, and late-descending rains. Tasso 10. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. New-born. new-born Pleasure brings to happier Men: West 10. New-born flocks, Vic. 9. New-fallen. A vestment unadorn'd, though white as new- fal'n Snows; Tasso 14. Newgate-bird. And filching and lying, and Newgate-bird tricks; C. C. 17. Newton's. Meek Newton's self bends from his state sub- lime, Inst. 25. Next. next thy sea-encircled coast. P. P. 82. The next with dirges due El. 113. fE enters next, and with her Eve appears, Ch. Cr. 5. •(-Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. Nice. Better to bottom tarts and cheesecakes nice, Shak. 17. Niggard. As sickly Plants betray a niggard Earth, E. G. 1. Nigh. Some frail memorial still erected nigh, El. 78. Night. the easy night, Eton 48. Night, and all her sickly dews, P. P. 49. Closed his eyes in endless night. P. P. 102. Mark the year, and mark the night, Bard 53. headlong ... he plung'd [sunk, Lett. 2 ] to endless night. Bard 144. Who . . . drags me from the realms of night? Odin 30. till substantial Night Has reassum'd Odin 91. By Night and lonely Contemplation led El. Mas. 79. Such as in silence of the night L. S. 101. a secret and dead hour of night, Agr. 61. from the realms of night my voice ye hear, Agr. 178. all was ignorance, and all was night. Ign. 30. sleep in peace his night of death. Child 6. As when athwart the dusky woods by night Tasso 47. Here gems break through the night Tasso 63. to cheer the dreary Night: Prop? 22. Obscure his radiance in a short-liv'd night; Prop? 34. The fruitful Muse from that auspicious Night Prop. 3 25. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. Nightingale. T was the Nightingale that sung! Song 6. Nightly 88 Nor Nightly. To save thy secret soul from nightly fears, Bard 7. So from th' astonish'd stars, her nightly train, Stat. 1 53. Nile. Nile redundant o'er his Summer-bed E. G. 101. And hoary Nile with pensive Aspect seem Prop. 3 49. Nile's. Euphrates' font, and Nile's mysterious head. Tasso 56. Kill. See also WiXL That will he, nill he, . . . He went, L. S. 87. Nine. Till the sad Nine in Greece's evil hour, P. P. 77. The portals nine of hell arise. Odin 16. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop? 43. Nips. •(■My cold soil nips the Buds with Snow. Ode 6. No. Thy Joys no glittering female meets, Spring 45. No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, Spring 46. No painted plumage to display: Springy. No Dolphin came, no Nereid stirr'd: Cat 34. A Fav'rite has no friend! Cat 36. No sense have they of ills to come, Eton 53. No more; where ignorance is bliss, Eton 99. But ah! 't is heard no more — P. P. ill. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 27. No more I weep. Bard 43. No pitying heart, no eye, afford A tear Bard 65. No more our long-lost Arthur we bewail. Bard 109. the echoing horn, No more shall rouse them El. 20. no more the blazing hearth shall burn, El. 21. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. If Mem'ry ... no Trophies raise, El. 38. No more, with Reason and thyself at Strife, El. Mas. 85. No farther seek his merits to disclose, El. 125. In Britain's Isle, no matter where, L. S. 1. no sign of grace, L. S. 89. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. Their human passions now no more, Inst. 49. The message needs no comment. Agr. 2. Deck'd with no other lustre, Agr. 37. no matter What; so 't be strange, Agr. 170. My lonely Anguish melts no Heart but mine; West 7. Their raptures . . . No yesterday, nor morrow know; Vic. 26. No very great wit, Char. 4. He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoel 8. You know I 'm no prude, C. C. 7. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. They say he's no Christian, C. C. 15. No tree is heard to whisper, View 10. Words ... by no meaning connected! Am. Lines 6. you have eat just enough and no more. Couplet 2. So mov'd the Seer, but on no harden 'd plain; Tasso 23. No common helps, no common guide ye need, Tasso 29. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Prop. 2 13. No Phoebus else, no other Muse I know, Prop? 5. No Giant Race, no Tumult of the skies, Prop? 35. No Mountain-Structures in my Verse should rise, Prop? 36. to-morrow is no more; Prop? 96. that heard me now no more: Dante 80. •(•No more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch.Cr. 11. Noah. He drinks — so did Noah; C. C. 28. Noble. Chill Penury repress'd their noble rage, El. 51. And so God save our noble King, L. S. 141. Welcome, my noble son, Inst. 67. bade him strike The noble quarry. Agr. 47. by Juno, It bears a noble semblance. Agr. 120. These conscious Shame withheld, and pride of noble line. Stat. 1 25. Nobler. Fate demands a nobler head; F. S. 43. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame Prop? C3. Nod. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 107. Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59. With servile simper nod the mitred head. To ph. 4. Nodding. The rocks and nodding groves rebellow P. P. 12. the foot of yonder nodding beech, El. 101. Turrets and arches nodding to their fall, View 14. Nods. nods his hoary head, and listens to the rhyme. Inst. 26. Lethargic nods upon her ebon throne. Ign. 24. Noise. Laughter, Noise, and thoughtless Joy, Adv. 19. Noiseless. the noiseless tenor of their way. El. 76. Nom de guerre. Melissa is her Nom de Guerre. LfiS. 35. None. But none from Cattraeth's vale return, Hoel 20. Noon. float amid the liquid noon: Spring 27. Noon-tide. in thy noon-tide beam [ray, MS.] Bard 69. His listless length at noontide would he stretch, El. 103. Nor. Nor cruel Tom, nor Susan heard. Cat 35. Nor all, that glisters, gold. Cat 42. Nor 89 Now Nor second He, that rode sublime P. P. 95. Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 114. Helm, nor Hauberk's twisted mail, Bard 5. Nor even thy virtues, Tyrant, shall avail Bard 6. nor thus forlorn Leave me unbless'd, Bard 101. Nor wash his visage in the stream, Odin 67. Nor see the sun's departing beam, Odin 68. No boding Maid . . . nor Prophetess of good; Odin 85. nor heaps his brooded stores, Owen 5. Nor on all profusely pours; Owen 6. Nor climb his knees El. Pem., Eg., Mas. 24. Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile El. 31. Nor you, ye Proud, impute to These El. 37. Their lot forbad: nor circumscrib'd alone El. 65. Nor cast one longing lingering look El. 88. nor yet beside the rill, El. in. Nor up the lawn, nor at the wood El. 112. Nor think to draw them from their dread abode, El. Mas. 150. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. Nor . . . Let . . . Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train Inst. 7. Nor Envy base, nor creeping Gain, Inst. 9. Nor dares . . . Profane thy inborn royalty Inst. 80. Nor fear the rocks, nor seek the shore: Inst. 92. unus'd to shake . . . nor to be lured Agr. 18. Nor am I yet to learn Agr. 56. Nor genial Warmth, nor genial Juice E.G.T,. Nor trusts her Blossoms to the churlish Skies. E. G. 8. Their raptures ... No yesterday, nor morrow know ; Vic. 26. Nor envy dar'd to view him with a frown. Williams 4. had Bute been true, Nor Mungo's . . . friend- ship vain, View 18. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, Stat} 13. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand, Stat} 40. Nor tempts he- yet the plain, Stat. 1 45. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road Tasso 37. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Eium Prop? 37. Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop? 38. Nor lofty Carthage struggleing with her Fate. Prop? 40. But nor Callimachus' enervate Strain Prop? 55. Nor I with unaccustom'd Vigour trace Prop? 57. Nor thou my gentle Calling disapprove, Prop? 63. nor the leeche's Care, Prop? 93. Nor changing Skies can hurt, nor sultry Air. Prop? 94. who thou art; nor on what Errand Sent Dante 10. Nor long endur'd the Chase: Dante 37. Speechless my sight I fiVd, nor wept, Dante 53. My struggling Sorrow, nor [not?] to heighten theirs: Dante 69. Norman. There the Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 15. North. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Northern. Facing to the northern clime, ... he traced Odin 21. the influence of the northern star E. G. 68. Nose. But his nose is a shame, C. C. 8. Nose's. Brown sees thee sitting on his nose's tip, Com. Lines 4. Not, omitted. See Cannot, Don't. Note. Responsive to the cuckow's note, Spring 6. The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. El. 40. The simplest note that swells the gale, Vic. 50. Notes. To brisk notes in cadence beating, P. P. 34. Far and wide the notes prolong. F. S. 60. in these Notes their artless Tale relate, El. Mas. 78. These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, West 5. Idle notes! untimely green! Song 7. the song-thrush there Scatters his loose notes Birds 2. I favour her repose With lulling Notes, Prop? 19. •fin shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. Nothing. And passages, that lead to nothing. L. S. 8. Can you do nothing but describe? L. S. 20. Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright, Shak. 7. Nothing's. Big with the important Nothing's History. Prop? 30. Nought. +No more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch.Cr.11. Nourish. ■(•Maggots too will form and nourish; Ode 16. Novice. taught his novice hand To aim Agr. 30. Now. Who foremost now delight to cleave Eton 25. Now the rich stream of music winds along P. P. 7. Now rowling down the steep amain, P. P. 10. Now pursuing, now retreating, P. P. 32. Now in circling troops they meet: P. P. 33. what daring Spirit Wakes thee now? P. P. 113. Now, Brothers, . . . Stamp we our vengeance deep, Bard 95. Now the storm begins to lower F. S. I. Now your thundering faulchion wield; F. S. Pem. 62. Now your sable steed bestride. F. S. Pem. 63. Now my weary lips I close; [:] Odin 57, 71. Numbers 90 Odorous King of Men, I know thee now; Odin 82. Now fades the glimmering landscape El. 5. Now all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. Mas. 6. now smiling as in scorn, El. 105. Now drooping, woeful-wan, El. 107. Their human passions now no more, Inst. 49. Now the golden Morn aloft Vic. 1. Their raptures now that wildly flow, Vic. 25. Now let him sleep in peace Child 6. Though now a book, and interleaved you see. Shak.4. But what awaits me now is worst of all. Shak. 8. Now mouldering fanes and battlements arise, View MS. 13. Now clean, now hideous, mellow now, now gruff, Par. on Ep. I. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, Stat. 1 13. And now in dust the polish'd ball he roll'd, Stat. 1 41. Now fitting to his gripe and nervous arm, Stat. 1 43. now through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 49. now hear My Wrongs, Dante 14. oh! if thou weep not now, Dante 47. now the Hour Of timely Food approach'd; Dante 49. that heard me now no more: Dante 80. f No more, our Esthers now are nought but Hetties, Ch. Cr. 11. fNow a pert Prig, he perks Ch. Cr. 33. fNow peers, pores, ponders, Ch. Cr. 34. fNow a proud Prince, Ch. Cr. 35. f And now a Player, a Peer, Ch. Cr. 36. fNow seems a Penny, and now shews a Pound; Ch. Cr. 38. Numbers. In loose numbers wildly sweet P. P. 61. Numbers would give their oaths L. S. 117. From Cynthia all that in my numbers shines; Prop. 3 3. fCopious numbers, swelling grain; Ode 8. fTragick Numbers, buskin'd Strains, Ode 31. Numbs. That numbs the soul with icy hand, Eton 89. Nurse. Stern rugged Nurse ! thy rigid lore Adv. 13. Nursed. The silken son of dalliance, nurs'd in ease Agr. 98. Nymph. The hapless Nymph with wonder saw: Cat 19. O, omitted. See Oh. Oak. See also Giant-oak. thunder's fiery stroke, Glancing on the shiver'd oak; Conan 8. Oak's. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch Spring 11. Oar. with adventrous oar and ready sail E. G. 104. Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat. 2 20. Oath. strengthen it With his plain soldier's oath, Apr. 1 ci. Oaths. Numbers would give their oaths upon it, L. S. 127. Obedient. he led Beneath the obedient river's inmost bed; 'I' as so 44. Obeisance. With shows of fair obeisance; Agr. 102. Obey. Thee the voice, the dance, obey, P. P. 25. Once again my call obey, Odin 51. Prophetess, my spell obey, Odin 59. Yet awhile my call obey; Odin 73. His mother shall obey him. Agr. 3. Object. A different Object do these Eyes require: West 6. Obligation. Suffices not to pay the obligation. Agr. 59. Obscure. Their homely joys, and destiny obscure; El. 30. Why does yon Orb, . . . Obscure his radiance Prop? 34. Obsequies. afford A tear to grace his obsequies. Bard 66. Obsequious. obsequious vows From voluntary realms, Agr. 35. Obtrusive. not obtrusive, she ... no venal incense flings; Inst. 78. Obvious. Not obvious, . . . she ... no venal incense flings; Inst. 78. Ocean. The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean El. 54. Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat. 2 20. How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop. 2 23. Oceans. Oceans unknown, inhospitable Sands! Tasso 32. Odd. so was thought somewhat odd; Char. 3. To reject him for such peccadillos, were odd; C. C. 29. Oddly. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — C. C. 9. Odin. Hie thee, Odin, Odin MS. 87. Odin's. What dangers Odins Child await, Odin 53. By Odin's fierce embrace comprest, Odin 64. Odorous. beneath the od'rous shade P. P. 58. O'er 91 Oh O'er. O'er Idalia's velvet-green P. P. 27. O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, P. P. 40. Hurls o'er their . . . rear, P. P. MS. 52. Till o'er the eastern cliffs from far P. P. MS. 52. shaggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. Woods, that wave o'er Delphi's steep, P. P. 66. Wide o'er the fields of Glory P. P. 104. Bright-eyed Fancy hov'ring o'er P. P. 108. o'er the crested pride Of the First Edward Bard 9. o'er old Conway's foaming flood, Bard 16. O'er thee, oh King ! their hundred arms they wave, Bard 25. who o'er thy country hangs The scourge of Heav'n. Bard 59. While proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bard 72. bending o'er th' accursed loom Bard 95. spread O'er the youthful King your shield. F. S. 32. shall stretch O'er the plenty of the plain. F. S. 40. O'er it hangs the shield of gold; Odin 45. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. If Mem'ry o'er their Tomb no Trophies raise, El. 38. While o'er the Heath we hied, £/.Mas. 118. When he had fifty winters o'er him, L. S. 10. Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, L. S. 54. And o'er the bed and tester clamber, L. S. 64. Their tears, their little triumphs o'er, Inst. 48. the fate Impending o'er your son: Agr. 66. The massy sceptre o'er thy slumb'ring line? Ign. 16. triumphant o'er the vanquish'd world; Ign. 28. o'er the trembling Nations from afar E. G. 46. goes O'er Libya's deserts E. G. 77. Nile redundant o'er his Summer-bed E. G. 101. broods o'er Egypt with his wat'ry wings, E. G. 103. rise and glitter o'er the ambient tide E. G. 107. o'er the living scene Scatters . . . green. Vic. 7. o'er the cheek of Sorrow throw . . . grace; Vic. 31. And o'er his head, ... the circle sped; Stat. 1 47. And sports and wantons o'er the frozen tide. Tasso 22. Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: Prop. 3 8. while o'er the Place You drop the Tear, Prop? 106. fLightly lambent o'er their frame, Rond. 12. O'er-arching. Ye brown o'er-arching groves, Inst. 27. O'er-canopies. The . . . beech O'er-canopies the glade; Spring 14. O'erpower. suns of fiercer flame O'erpower the fire E. G. 65. O'erta'en. his helpless offspring soon O'erta'en beheld, Dante 39. Of, omitted. Off. sees far off with an indignant groan, E. G. 62. Officious. In vain the nations with officious fear Their cym- bals toss, Stat. 1 56. Offspring. his helpless offspring soon O'erta'en beheld, Dante 38. Oft. And oft, beneath the od'rous shade P. P. 58. Yet oft before his infant eyes P. P. 118. and envy oft thy happy grandsire's end. Bard MS. 76. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield, El. 25. Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke: El. 26. Oft have we seen him El. 98. There scatter'd oft, the earliest of the Year, El. Pem. 117 ; Mas. 137. Oft as the Woodlark piped El. Mas. 119. Oft at the foot of yonder . . . beech, El. Mas. 121. Full oft . . . he . . . led the Brawls; L. S. 9. Yet hither oft a glance . . . They send Inst. 19. Oft at the blush of dawn I trod Inst. 30. Oft woo'd the gleam of Cynthia Inst. 32. He reigns, . . . who oft has bade, Agr. 69. how oft in weak and sickly minds Agr. 72. yielding modesty, And oft reverted eye, Agr. 198. Oft o'er the trembling Nations from afar E. G. 46. oft have issued, Host impelling Host, E. G. 50. For oft . . . his native land Admired that arm, Stat} 35. oft on Alpheus' shore The pond'rous brass . . . he bore; Stat} 36. Has oft the Charms of Constancy confest, Prop? 72. Often. Styack has often seen the sight L. S. 103. often calling On their dear Names, Dante 79. Oh. Oh, gently on thy Suppliant's head, Adv. 33. Stay, oh stay! nor thus forlorn Leave me Bard 101. But oh! what solemn scenes Bard 105. oh! 't is a cause To arm . . . childhood Agr. 137. Oh take me to thy peaceful shade Ign. 6. Oh say, successful dost thou still oppose 7gtf. 13. Oh say — she hears me not, Ign. 23. Oh! sacred age! Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. Vast, oh my friends, and difficult the toil Tasso 27. Oh, might that envied Happiness be mine! Prop? 67. Oh! thou art cruel, Dante 45. oh! if thou weep not now, Dante 47. But oh! when I beheld My Sons, Dante 61. oh Earth! could'st thou not gape Dante 71. •{•Leave, and lose it, — oh the pain! Rond. 4, 12,20, 28, 36. Old 92 On Old. See also Old-tree. Where each old poetic Mountain P. P. 73. o'er old Conway's foaming flood, Bard 16. Your helpless, old, expiring master view ! Bard MS. 72. gorgeous Dames, and Statesmen old . . . appear. Bard 113. beech, That wreathes its old fantastic roots El. 102. ties ... Of old respect and gratitude, Agr. 114. Again the buried Genius of old Rome Agr. 141. Not thus of old, with ensigns wide Ign. 27. Like old Sesostris with barbaric pride; Ign. 37. of Madoc old He ask'd no heaps of hoarded gold; Hoel 7. where three sisters of old In harmless society guttle C. C. 3. Did not Israel filch from the Egyptians of old C. C. 25. Old, and abandon 'd by each venal friend, View 1. ■f-The walls of old Jerusalem appear, Ch. Cr. 27. Old-tree. in the park beneath an old-tree, L. S. 122. On. The insect youth are on the wing, Spring 25. On hasty wings thy youth is flown; Spring 48. to send on earth Virtue, Adv. 9. on thy solemn steps attend: Adv. 29. gently on thy Suppliant's head, Adv. 33. On Thracia's hills the Lord of War P. P. 17. Perching on the scept'red hand P. P. 20. Pours on their scatter'd rear, P. P. MS. 52. when they first were open'd on the day P. P. MS. 118. On a rock . . . the Poet stood; Bard 15. On dreary Arvon's shore they lie, Bard 35. On yonder cliffs, ... I see them sit, Bard 44. Low on his funeral couch he lies! Bard 64. Youth on the prow, Bar d 74. A smile of horror on their baffled guest. Bard Lett. 1 82. unborn Ages, crowd not on my soul! Bard 108. Till he on Hoder^s corse shall smile Odin 69. corse . . . Flaming on the fun'ral pile. Odin 70. Nor on all profusely pours; Owen 6. On her shadow . . . Lochlin plows Owen 13. on his native sands The Dragon-Son . . . stands; Owen 19. fades the glimmering landscape on the sight, El. 5. waste its sweetness on the desert air. El. 56. shut the gates of mercy on mankind, El. 68. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. on the custom'd hill, El. 109. Grav'd on the stone El. 116. frown'd not on his humble birth, El. 119. On the first marching . . . The Muses, . . . Convey 'd him L. S. 69. Yet on his way ... he prefer 'd his case, L. S. 89. with a blush on recollection Own'd, L. S. 94. Bursts on my ear th' indignant lay: Inst. 14. where on their opening soul First . . . ardour stole. Inst. 21. Great Edward, with the lilies on his brow Inst. 39. on her bridal morn Inst. 41. All that on Granta's fruitful plain Inst. 51. To glitter on the diadem. Inst. 76. the spirit of Britannicus Yet walks on earth: Agr. 15. On expectation's strongest wing to soar Agr. 42. benefits ... sit heavy on the soul, Agr. 75. pleasures That wait on youth, Agr. 79. On this base My great revenge shall rise; Agr. 120. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. the tim'rous cloud That hangs on thy clear brow. Agr. 194. on the . . . Powers Of Nature idly lavishes E.G. 13. Smile not indulgent on the rising Race, E. G. 16. on resolution's wings, . . . dauntless goes E. G. 75. on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. rhymes that us'd to linger on, Bent. 9. tost On the thorny bed of Pain, Vic. 46. Her infant image . . . Sits smiling on a father's woe: Clerke 10. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child 3. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams 10. On surrounding foes advance? Caradoc 3. Glancing on the shiver 'd oak; Conan 8. By acclamations roused, came tow'ring on. Stat} 14. All eyes were bent on his experienced hand, Stat. 1 34. oft on Alpheus' shore The pond'rous brass . . . he bore; Stat. 1 36. hag . . . smiles malignant on the labouring power. Stat. 1 59. Third in the labours of the disc come on, Stat? 1. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat. 2 9. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat. 2 10. As on the Rhine, when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. So mov'd the Seer, but on no harden 'd plain; Tasso 23. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop. 2 9. Earth's monster-brood stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop. 2 41. Lips, which on the clotter'd Locks ... he wiped, Dante 2. on what Errand Sent hither: Dante 10. then on my Children's Eyes . . . my Sight I fix'd, Dante 52. often calling On their dear Names, Dante 80. f and my head Rhimed on, Ode 22. •j-a Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, or Caelia's Bonnet. Ode 36. •j-But why on such mock grandeur should we dwelt, Ch. Cr. 23. fthen perches on the spray, Ch. Cr. 41. Once 93 Or Once. Where once my careless childhood stray 'd, Eton 13. Sword, that once a Monarch bore, F. S. 15. They, whom once the desart-beach Pent F. S. 37. Once again my call obey, Odin 51. Once again arise, and say, Odin 60. Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. explore Thy once loved haunt, El. Mas. 112. High Dames of honour once, L. S. 107. He once or twice had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 125. native plains, and empires once her own. E. G. 63. — but he once had a wife; C. C. 14. 'T is Willy begs, once a right proper man, Shak. 3. yet the dread path once trod, Stanza 2. At once give loose to Utterance, and to Tears. Dante 9. Take back, what once was yours. Dante 68. fBut when once the potent dart Rond. 29. One. one false step is ne'er retriev'd, Cat 38. one longing ling'ring look El. 88. woeful-wan, like one forlorn, El. 107. One morn I miss'd him El. 109. From whence one fatal morning issues L. S. 22. one Who had such liberal power Agr. 88. not to one in this benighted age Bent. 17. Of Pisa one, and one from Ephyre; Stat. 1 12. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. before my Eyes Died one by one; Dante 76. yFor one Silk-worm thought that thrives Ode 37. •jthese Flies . . . can boast of one good Quality; Ode 50. fThen one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. One's. Than thus be patch'd and cobbled in one's grave. Shak. 20. Ones. His young ones ran beside him. Dante 32. Only. To hide her cares her only art, Clerke MS. 7. ■(•cooling breezes I only wrote of; Ode 21. -j-Queer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52. Onward. Onward still his way he takes Odin 13. Ope. Or ope the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94. Oped. when I Oped his young eye Agr. 45. Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 28. Open. Owen . . . Lord of . . . open heart. Owen 8. •j-Open the Joors of the with^ra wing-room; Ch. Cr. 2. Opened. when they first were open'd P. P. MS. 118. His shaggy throat he open'd wide, Odin 6. Opener. Can opener skies, and suns of fiercer flame E. G. 64. Opening. where on their opening soul First . . . ardour stole. Inst. 21. warm the opening Heart. E. G. 12. skies, To him are opening Paradise. Vic. 52. Thro' a small crevice opening, Dante 22. Opinion. Howe'er Opinion tinge the . . . Mind, E. G. 27. Oppose. dost thou still oppose Thy leaden aegis Ign. 13. Or. Or chill'd by age, Spring 39. Or urge the flying ball? Eton 30. Or where Maeander's amber waves P. P. 69. Or ope the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94. Or drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds: El. Eg. 8. Or swallow twitt'ring from the straw-built shed, El. Mas. 18. The cock's shrill clarion, or the echoing horn, El. 19. Or chaunticleer . . . , or ecchoing horn, El. Mas. 19. Or busy housewife ply her evening care: El. 22. Or [Nor, Eg., Mas.] climb his knees El. 24. storied urn or animated bust El. 41. Or Flatt'ry soothe the dull cold ear of death ? El. 44. Or wak'd to extasy the living lyre. El. 48. Or shut the gates of mercy El. Eg. 68. Or craz'd with care, or cross'd in hopeless love. El. 108. Or draw his frailties from their dread abode, El. 126. Or creased, like dogs-ears, in a folio. L. S. 68. Or at the chappel-door L. S. 104. Or any malice to the poultry, L. S. 124. To taste of hollow kindness, or partake Agr. 19. unknown To fame, or fortune; Agr. 39. she fear'd, or wish'd to be pursued. Agr. 199. Or chearful Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. Or on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. in Shakespeare's or in Milton's page, Bent. 19. Or deepest shades, Vic. 34. drink Nectar ... Or the grape's extatic juice. Hoel 18. Have ye seen the dusky boar, Or the bull, Caradoc 2. Or roused by sprightly sounds Prop? 5. All angry heaven inflicts, or hell can feel, Prop? 45. Or are our fears th' enthusiast's empty dream, Prop? 48. Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: Prop? b. Orb 94 Or if to Musick she the Lyre awake, Prop? 13. In brief whatever she do, or say, or look, Prop? 27. Or if, alas! it be my Fate Prop? 69. Or if I fall the Victim Prop? 77. Or drive the infernal Vulture Prop? 90. Or who can probe the undiscover'd Wound? Prop? 92. Or Thou dost mourn to think, Dante 46. yet wept I not, or answer'd Dante 57. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. •j-Or, soon as they begin to blow Ode 5. •j-Or Poppy-thoughts blast all the shoots. Ode 12. fa Sonnet On Chloe's Fan, or Caelia's Bonnet. Ode 36. fa Peer, a Pimp, or Priest; Ch. Cr. 36. •j-Like Perch or Pike, Ch. Cr. 39. {hangs like Pear or Plum, Ch. Cr. 40. {Pippin or Peach; Ch. Cr. 41. {in form of Parrot, Pye, or Popinjay. Ch. Cr. 42. Orb. sanguine cloud, . . .has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 136. the rolling Orb, that gives the Day, E. G. 23. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand, Stat. 1 15. All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, Stat. 1 24. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat? 9. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat? 10. with silver light Relumes her crescent Orb Prop? 22. Order. And mitred fathers in long order go: Inst. 38. Orders. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. Toph. 8. Ore. The parts combine and harden into Ore: Tasso 62. Organ. when thou hear'st the organ piping shrill , Shak. 15. Orient. With orient hues, unborrow'd of the Sun: P. P. 120. Original. shake her own creation To its original atoms — Agr. 92. Orkney's. Orkney's woe, and Randver's bane. F. 5. 8. Osborne's. •(•All, all, but Grannam Osborne's Gazetteer. Ch. Cr. 20. Other. The other Amazon kind Heaven Had arm'd L. S. 29. Deck'd with no other lustre, Agr. 37. These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, West 5. Far other scenes than these View MS. 19. no other Muse I know, Prop? 5. The Power of Herbs can other Harms remove, Prop? 79. my other three before my Eyes Died Dante 75. Others. What others are, to feel, Adv. 48. Others'. she learned to melt at others' woe. Adv. 16. Our, omitted. Ours. Ours to kill, and ours to spare: F. S. 34. Out, omitted. Outcry. voice, And outcry of the battle? Agr. 96. Out-stretched. at my Feet out-stretch'd, Dante 73. Over, See O'er. Overleaps. The orb . . . Far overleaps all bound, Stat? 12. Owe. more to Innocence their Safety owe El. Mas. 75. Owed. To Chiron Phoenix owed his long-lost Sight, Prop? 83. Owen. Owen swift, and Owen strong; Owen 2. Owen's. Owen's praise demands my song, Owen 1. Owes. Nero To such a mother owes; Agr. 58. Owl. The mopeing owl does to the moon complain El. 10. Owls. Owls would have hooted View 23. Own. Th' unfeeling for his own. Eton 94. and Misery not thine own. Adv. MS. 8. from her own she learn'd to melt at others' woe. Adv. 16. Exact my own defects to scan, Adv. 47. Melancholy mark'd him for her own. El. 120. shake her own creation Agr. 91. ears to own Her spirit-stirring voice; Agr. 123. native plains, and empires once her own. E. G. 63. saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 62. Owned. Own'd, ... his quiver ... no protection. L. S. 95. nations own'd her unresisted might, Ign. 29. ■fP pokes his head out, ■j-P, Proteus-like all tricks, Ch. Cr. 29. can shew, Ch. Cr. 43. Pace 95 Park Pace. With necks in thunder cloath'd, and long-re- sounding pace. P. P. 106. Pacing. pacing forth With solemn steps Inst. 35. Pack. The hungry Pack their sharp-set Fangs embrued. Dante 40. Page. Knowledge . . . her ample page . . . did ne'er unroll; El. 49. in Shakespeare's or in Milton's page, Bent. 19. Pain. A stranger yet to pain! Eton 14. The tender for another's pain; Eton 93. The Proud are taught to taste of pain, Adv. 6. Labour, and Penury, the racks of Pain, P. P. 43. Pale Grief, and pleasing Pain, Bard 129. Pain can reach the Sons of Heav'n! Odin 48. The threats of pain and ruin to despise, El. 62. Heavier toil, superior pain. Inst. 58. They follow Pleasure, and they fly from Pain; E. G. 31. tost On the thorny bed of Pain, Fie. 46. In ling'ring pain, in death resign'd, Clerke MS. 9. Here, freed from pain, Child 1 . fLeave, and lose it, — oh the pain! Rond. 4, 12, 20, 28, 36. fyet has not a pain; Ch. Cr. 29. Painful. The painful family of Death, Eton 83. Paint. Richly paint the vernal year P. P. 90. Go! you can paint it well Agr. 12. And paint the margin of the costly stream, Tasso 64. What colours paint the vivid arch of Jove; Prop? 29. To paint the Hero's Toil, Prop? 33. Painted. No painted plumage to display: Spring 47. Nor . . . Let painted Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train Inst. 8. her that arm'd This painted Jove, Agr. 30. Pair. Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25. Palaces. Unpeopled palaces delude his eyes, FiewMS. 15. Pale. With fury pale, and pale with woe, BardLttt. 1 17. Smear'd with gore, and ghastly pale: Bard 36. Pale Grief and pleasing Pain, Bard 129. how she turn'd pale and trembled: Agr. 9. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat. 1 54. may my pale Coarse be borne. Prop? 78. Paler. the paler ro«e, The rival of her crown Inst. 43. Palgrave. Weddell attends your call, and Palgrave proud, Com. Lines 1. Pall. A train of mourning Friends attend his Pall, Prop? 97. Pallid. Disdainful Anger, pallid Fear, Eton 63. dreaming Sloth of pallid hue, Inst. 4. Palm. the champions, . . . the palm despair'd resign; Stat. 1 23. Paly. That monthly waning hides her paly fires, Prop? 20. Panegyricks. See Panegyrics. Panegyrics. Coarse Panegyricks would but teaze her. L.S. 34. Panel. Each pannel in achievements cloathing, L. S. 6. Pang. A pang, to secret sorrow dear; Clerke 13. Pangaea's. With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, Stat. 1 29. Pangs. Tyrants . . . groan With pangs unfelt before, Adv. 8. The struggling pangs of conscious truth El. 69. Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop? 40. Pannel. See Panel. Panting. The panting herds repose: Spring 22. the panting Sire Of Strength bereft, Dante 37. Pants. Agony, that pants for breath, Owen 39. Papers. Papers and books, a huge Imbroglio! L. S. 66. Paradise. Thought would destroy their paradise. Eton 98. skies, To him are opening Paradise. Vic. 52. Pardon. The Muses, hopeless of his pardon, Convey'd him L. S. 70. Parent. Parent of sweet and solemn-breathing airs, P. P. 14. Imbibes a flavour of its parent earth, E. G. 85. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. •f-Buzzing with all their parent Faults; Ode 46. Parents'. the darling of his parents' eyes: Child 2. Parish. By this time all the Parish know it L. S. 42. Park. How in the park beneath an old-tree, L. S. 122. Parlor 96 Pease Parlor. But bounce into the parlour enter'd. L. S. 56. Parlour. See Parlor. Parnassus. Left their Parnassus for the Latian plains. P. P. 79- Parrot, fin form of Parrot, Pye, or Popinjay. Ch. Cr. 42. Parsons. Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright, Shak. 7. Part. •j-Part in a Chrysalis appear. Ode 42. •jto love, — and then to part, Rond. 1,9,17,25,33. Partake. partake His hospitable board: Agr. 19. Parted. Thyrsis, when we parted, swore Song i< Parthian. , in Armenia quell the Parthian force Agr. hi. Parting. The Curfew tolls the knell of parting day, El. 1. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. And parting surges round the vessel roar; Stat. 2 21. fLight to them the parting knell: Rond. 23. Parts. The parts combine and harden into Ore: Tasso 62. Pass. Further they pass, Tasso 57. •j-Some have lov'd, to pass the time, Rond. 13. •j-See Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view; Ch. Cr. 26. Passages. And passages, that lead to nothing. L. S. 8. Through subterraneous passages they went, Tasso 49. Passed. He pass'd the flaming bounds of Place and Time: P. P. 98. Passes. The famish'd Eagle screams, and passes by. Bard 38. Passing. the passing tribute of a sigh. El. 80. Thy passing Courser's slacken'd Speed restrain; Prop? 102. Passion. ev'ry fierce tumultuous Passion El. Mas. 82. are privy to your passion. Agr. 23. to check this dangerous passion, Agr. 106. Passions. These shall the fury Passions tear, Eton 61. frantic Passions hear thy soft controul. P. P. 16. Their human passions now no more, Inst. 49. Past. Smiles on past Misfortune's brow Vic . 29. skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song 10. Pastorals. •j-First when Pastorals I read, Ode 19. Patched. Than thus be patch'd and cobbled in one's grave. Shak. 20. Path. Slow thro' the church-way path El. 114. yet the dread path once trod, Stanza 2. Paths. The paths of pleasure trace, Eton 24. As the paths of fate we tread, F. S. 29. The paths of glory lead but to the grave. El. 36. in the dangerous paths of fame, Williams 1. Patience. thy rigid lore With patience . . . she bore: Adv. 14. A moment's patience, gentle Mistress Anne: Shak. 1. Patient. to patient valour train'd They guard E. G. 94. Pattern. Takes them all for his pattern ; Satire 20. Paul's. And foxes stunk and litter 'd in St. Paul's. View 24. Paws. The velvet of her paws, Cat 9. Pay. the Graces homage pay. P. P. 37. Suffices not to pay the obligation. Agr. 59. ■j-grateiully they pay Their little Songs, Ode 51. Pea. |A Pea, a Pin, Ch. Cr. 37. Peace. A grateful Earnest of eternal Peace. El. Mas. 84. improve the polish'd Arts of Peace: E. G. 41. Now let him sleep in peace Child 6. Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop. 1 1. And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop? 88. Peaceful. take me to thy peaceful shade again. Ign. 6. The peaceful virtues lov'd to dwell. Clerke 4. Peach. flike Pear or Plum, Pippin or Peach; Ch. Cr. 41. Peaked. In peaked hoods and mantles tarnish'd, L. S. 105. Pealing. The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. El. 40. Pear. fhangs like Pear or Plum, Ch. Cr. 40. Peasants. Bewitch'd the children of the peasants, L. S. 46. Pease. As the Master of Keys Is as like as two Pease, Satire 14. Peccadillos 97 Phantom Peccadillos. To reject him for such peccadillos, were odd; C. C. 29. Peep. at the peep of dawn El. 98. Peeping. And from the gallery stand peeping: L. S. 100. Peeps, f Like Punch, he peeps, Ch. Cr. 30. Peer. said the sighing peer, View 17. Peeress. The Peeress comes. L. S. 109. Peers. fNow peers, pores, ponders, Ch. Cr. 34. Pembroke. The Master of Pembroke Satire 29. Pen. Grease his best pen, Shak. 16. Pencil. This pencil Take (she said), P. P. 89. bids the pencil answer to the lyre. Bent. 4. Pen'd. See Penned. Pendent. quaff the pendent Vintage as it grows. E. G. 57. The pendent rock, Ixion's whirling wheel, Prop. 2 46. Pendragon. At Broom, Pendragon, Appleby and Brough. Par. on Ep. 3. Penitence. In lieu of penitence, and vain remorse, Agr. 179. Penitent. Never hang down your head, you poor penitent elf, C.C. 31. Penned. He once or twice had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 125. attend To the Satire I've pen'd Satire 2. Penny. fNow seems a Penny, Ch. Cr. 38. Pension. A place or a pension he did not desire, Char. 5. Pensive. The pensive Selima reclin'd, Cat 5. If chance that e'er some pensive spirit El. Mas. 109. And hoary Nile with pensive Aspect seem Prop? 49. Pent. desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F. S. 38. Penury. Labour, and Penury, the racks of Pain, P. P. 43. Chill Penury repress'd their noble rage, El. 51. People. She curtsies, ... To all the People of condition. L. S. 112. The dusky people drive before the gale; E. G. 105. Peopled. Hark, how thro' the peopled air Spring 23 Perch. •(-Like Perch or Pike, Ch. Cr. 39 Perchance. He Perchance may heed 'em: Agr. 88 Perches. ■j-then perches on the spray, Ch. Cr. 41 Perching. Perching on the scept'red hand P. P. 20, Perfect. •(■The Dowager grows a perfect double D. Ch. Cr. 4. Perfidious. Ruggieri, Pisa's perfidious Prelate this: Dante 14. Performed. your errand is perform'd, Agr. 1. Due sacrifice perform'd with barb'rous rites Agr. 62. Perhaps. Perhaps in this . . . spot is laid Some heart El. 45. How flames perhaps, . . . Shall sink this beau- teous fabric Prop? 27. fPerhaps Thalia prompts a Sonnet 0^35. Perish. Perish (you cried) the mother! Agr. 68. They perish in the boundless deep. Vic. 60. Perishes. If the son reign, the mother perishes. Agr. 67. Perks. ■(•he perks upon your face, Ch. Cr. 33. Permit. Yet would the Tyrant Love permit me raise Prop? 31. Perpetual. Perpetual draws his . . . train of mud: lgn.4. •(•in a perpetual round, Ch. Cr. 37. Persian. Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop? 38. Person. ■(■What Ease and Elegance her person grace, Ch. Cr. 7. •(■The Pleasantest Person in the Christ-Cross row. Ch. Cr. 44. Pert. Pert barristers, and parsons nothing bright, Shah 7. ■(•Now a pert Prig, he perks Ch. Cr. 33. Peter's. The Master of Peter's Has all the same features; Satire 3 1 . Owls would have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. Petition. My Lady heard their joint petition, L. 5. 49. Phantom. tremble at the phantom I have raised? Agr. 86. Pheasants 98 Place Pheasants. And suck'd the eggs, and kill'd the pheasants. L. S. 48. Philippi. And sad Philippi, red with Roman Gore: Prop? 46. Philosophic. Thy philosophic Train be there To soften, Adv. 43. measured Laws and philosophic Ease E. G. 40. Phizzes. And Glyn cut Phizzes, Com. Lines 3. Phlegra's. of Jove, and Phlegra's blasted Plain; Prop? 56. Phlegyas. Phlegyas the long-expected play began, Stat. 1 32. By Phlegyas warn'd, and fir'd by Mnestheus' fate, Stat. 2 4. Phoebus. To Phoebus he prefer 'd his case, L. S. 91. redning Phoebus lifts his golden Fire: West 2. No Phoebus else, no other Muse I know, Prop? 5. ■jTo Phoebus gratefully they pay Their little Songs, Ode 51. Phoebus-. And Phoebus' Son recall'd Androgeon Prop 3 84. fl told Of Phoebus' heat and Daphne's cold. Ode 24. Phoenix. To Chiron Phoenix owed his long-lost Sight, Prop? 83. Phrase. gorgeous phrase of labour'd eloquence Agr. 149. Physic. "Lord! sister," says Physic to Law, C. C. 5. Phyzzy. Then his character, Phyzzy, C. C. 13. Pick-pocket. such a pick-pocket air! C. C. 6. Picture. 'T is just like the picture in Rochester's book; C. C. 12. Pictured. Scatters from her pictur'd urn P. P. 109. But pictured horrour and poetic woes. Prop? 50. Piercing. Sorrow's piercing dart. Eton 70. Pike. •j-Like Perch or Pike, Ch. Cr. 39. Pikes. Pikes must shiver, javelins sing, F. S. 22. Pile. By the moss-grown pile he sate; Odin 18. corse . . . Flaming on the fun'ral pile. Odin 70. An ancient pile of buildings stands: L. S. 2. Pimp. fa Peer, a Pimp, or Priest; Ch. Cr, 36. Pin. j-A Pea, a Pin, Ch. Cr. 37. Pinch. Rummage his Mother, pinch his Aunt, L. S. 59. fto prick, and pinch, and pluck; Ch. Cr. 32. Pindus'. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop? 31. Pies. For glorious puddings and immortal pies. Shak. 24. Pineing. See Pining. Pining. Or pineing Love shall waste their youth, Eton 65. Pines. When Pindus' self . . . Shakes all his Pines, Prop? 32. Pinion. Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 114. Pious. pious drops the closing eye requires; El. 90. With a lick of court white-wash, and pious grimace, C. C. 2. Here Holland form'd the pious resolution View 2. Piped. the Woodlark piped her farewell Song, El. Mas. 119. Pipes. There pipes the woodlark, Birds 1. Piping. when thou hear'st the organ piping shrill Shak. 15. Pippin. flike Pear or Plum, Pippin or Peach; Ch. Cr. 41. Pisa. Of Pisa one, and one from Ephyre; Stat. 1 14. Pisa's. oft in Pisa's sports, his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 35. Ruggieri, Pisa's perfidious Prelate this: Dante 14. I saw methought Towards Pisa's Mount, Dante 29. Pisgys. fthe Pisgys call him Puck, Ch. Cr. 31. Pitied. pitied ghosts Of the Syllani, Agr. 175. Pity. Pity, dropping soft the sadly-pleasing tear. Adv. 32. In pity to the country-farmer. L. S. 40. the soft springs of pity in my heart, Agr. 182. Pitying. No pitying heart, . . . afford A tear Bard 65. Place. the flaming bounds of Place and Time: P. P. 98. The place of fame and elegy supply: El. 82. To bless the place, Inst. 21. A place or a pension he did not desire, Char. 5. while o'er the Place You drop the Tear, Prop? 106. Plain 99 Plumes Plain. shall stretch O'er the plenty of the plain. F. S. 40. on Granta's fruitful plain, Inst. 51. strengthen it With his plain soldier's oath, Agr. 151. Foes to the gentler genius of the plain: E. G. 89. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child 3. Nor tempts he yet the plain, Stat} 45. So mov'd the Seer, but on no harden 'd plain; Tasso 23. of Jove, and Phlegra's blasted Plain; Prop? 56. f careless spares to weed the Plain: Ode 10. Plains. Left their Parnassus for the Latian plains. P. P. 78. sees far off . . . Her native plains, E. G. 63. Plan. mends the Plan their Fancy draws, E. G. 32. Plantations, "f He in plantations hangs Ch. Cr. 40. Plants. ackly Plants betray a niggard Earth, E.G.i. Firmly he plants each knee, Stat. 1 47. Play. The little victims play! Eton 52. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bard 120. And the weights, that play below, F. S. 11. Phlegyas the long-expected play began, Stat. 1 32. Swift shoots the Village-maid in rustic play Tasso 19. If the loose Curls around her Forehead play, Prop? 7. Player. ■(■And now a Player, a Peer, Ch. Cr. 36. Plays, f Youth, his torrid Beams thay [that?] plays, Ode 13. Plea. in gorgeous phrase . . . To dress thy plea, Agr. 150. Pleasantest. •(-The Pleasantest Person in the Christ-Cross row. Ch. Cr. 44. Please. Alas, who would not wish to please her! L. S. 36. 't will profit you, And please the stripling. H r - *3- Pleased. Pleas'd in thy lineaments we trace Inst. 69. Half pleas'd, half blushing, Bent. 2. ■(•Pleased with his Pranks, Ch. Cr. 31. Pleasing. See Sadly-pleasing, Self-pleas- ing, ah, pleasing shade, Eton 11. Less pleasing when possest; Eton 42. Pale Grief, and pleasing Pain, Bard 129. This pleasing anxious being El. 86. as their pleasing influence Bent. 27. My soul in Bacchus' pleasing fetters bound; Prop? 8. Pleasure. whisp'ring pleasure as they fly, Spring 8. The paths of pleasure trace, Eton 24. and Pleasure at the helm; Bard 74. new-born Pleasure brings to happier Men: West 10. They follow Pleasure, and they fly from Pain; £.G. 3 i. languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E. G. 45. where rosy Pleasure leads, Vic. 37. Near the source whence Pleasure flows; Vie. 54. Her pleasure, pleasures to impart, Clerke MS. 8. From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, Williams 7. With beauty, with pleasure surrounded, to lan- guish — Am. Lines 1. Pleasure's. nurs'd in ease And pleasure's flow'ry lap? Agr. 99. Pleasures. With antic Sports, and blue-eyed Pleasures, P. P. 30. pleasures That wait on youth, Agr. 78. Her pleasure, pleasures to impart, Clerke MS. 8. Plenteous. f If a plenteous Crop arise, Ode 7. Plenty. shall stretch O'er the plenty of the plain. F. S. 40. scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, El. 63. scatter . . . Showers of Plenty o'er the Land. E. G. 18. Insult the plenty of the vales below? E. G. 99. Pliant. cleave With pliant arm thy glassy wave ? Eton 26. Proud of the yoke, and pliant to the rod, E. G. 58. Plinlimmon. Made huge Plinlimmon bow his cloud-top'd head. Bar d 34. Plods. The plowman homeward plods his weary wav, El. 3. Plough. With side-long plough to quell the . . . ground, E. G. 91. Plow. See Plough. Plowman. The plowman homeward plods his weary way, £/. 3 . Plows. Lochlin plows the watry way; Owen 14 Pluck. fto prick, and pinch, and pluck; Ch. Cr. 31- Plum. •(•hangs like Pear or Plum, Ch. Cr. 40. Plumage. No painted plumage to display: Springy. Plumed. See Full-plumed. Plumes. With ruffled plumes, and flagging wing: P. P. 22. Plunged 100 Poured Plunged. headlong ... he plung'd to endless night. Bard 144. Ply. some . . . Their murm 'ring labours ply Eton 32. Or busy housewife ply her evening care: El. 22. Frisking ply their feeble feet; Vic. 10. Po. The Po was there to see, Tasso 55. Pocket. See Pick-pocket. Poet. With haggard eyes the Poet stood; Bard 18. A wicked Imp they call a Poet, L. S. 44. The Poet felt a strange disorder: L. S. 82. Speak to a Commoner and Poet! L. 5. 140. Poetic. Where each old poetic Mountain P. P. 73. But pictured horrour and poetic woes. Prop. 2 50. •(•Bids the poetick Spirit flourish; Ode 14. Poetry. That Slumber brings to aid my Poetry. Prop? 20. j-Seeds of Poetry and Rhime Ode 1. Poet's. Thou envied Honour of thy Poet's Days, Prop? 103. Poets. From fumbling baronets and poets small, Shak. 6. Points. Where he points his purple spear, Owen 33. Poised. he pois'd the well-known weight Stat? 3. Poison. I will not meet its poison. Agr. 163. Poisonings. Sorceries, Assassinations, poisonings — Agr. 172. Pokes. -fp pokes his head out, Ch. Cr. 29. Pole. with nearer Course surrounds To either Pole, E. G. 25. Polish. But Coeham had the polish given L. S. 31. Polished. improve the polish'd Arts of Peace: E. G. 41. A slipp'ry weight, and form'd of polish'd brass. Stat. 1 8. And now in dust the polish'd ball he roll'd, Stat. 1 41. Pomfret's. from Pomfret's walls shall send Bard MS. 75. Pomp. the pomp of tyrant-Power, P. P. 79. the pomp of pow'r, El. 33. The pomp and prodigality of heav'n. Bent. 20. Pompous. •j-Prince, in pompous Purple drest, Ch. Cr. 35. Pond. •j-in Pond you see him come, Ch. Cr. 39. Ponderous. The pond'rous brass in exercise he bore; Stat. 1 37. The ponderous mass sinks in the cleaving ground, Stat? 16. Ponders. •(•Now peers, pores, ponders, Ch. Cr. 34. Poor. Poor moralist! and what art thou? Spring 43. The short and simple annals of the poor. El. 32. He stood as mute as poor Macleane. L. S. 120. Too poor for a bribe, Char. 1. Never hang down your head, you poor penitent elf, C.C. 31. to think, what my poor Heart Foresaw, Dante 46. Pope. Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it. L. S. 16. The energy of Pope they might efface, Bent. 15. Popinjay. •(•In form of Parrot, Pye, or Popinjay. Ch. Cr. 42. Poppy-thoughts . fOr Poppy-thoughts blast all the shoots. Ode 12. Pops. f but soon pops in again; Ch. Cr. 30. Pore. pore upon the brook that babbles by. El. 104. Pores. •(■Now peers, pores, ponders, Ch. Cr. 34. Port. See Lion-port. Portals. The portals nine of hell arise. Odin 16. But hark! the portals sound, Inst. 35. Heaven lifts its everlasting portals high, Stanza 3. Possessed. Less pleasing when possest; Eton 42. Possest. See Possessed. Potent. •(•But when once the potent dart Pond. 29. Potentates. High potentates, and dames of royal birth, Inst. 37. Pother. What a pother is here about wenching and roar- ing! C. C. 23. Pothooks. The powerful pothooks did so move him, L. S. 86. Poultry. Or any malice to the poultry, L. S. 124. Pound. •(•and now shews a Pound ; Ch. Cr. 38. Pour. Headlong, impetuous, see it pour; P. P. II. the cloudy Magazines . . . pour the autumnal rain; Prop? 26. Poured. Rich streams of regal bounty pour'd, Inst. 52. Pours 101 Prey Pours. The Attic warbler pours her throat, Spring 5. Pours on their scattered rear, P. P. MS. 52. Nor on all profusely pours; Owen 6. reflection Pours its cool dictate! Agr. 83. Poverty. Poverty to fill the band, Eton 88. Despair, and fell Disease, and ghastly Poverty: Adv. 40. Power. See also Tyrant-power. Love, gentle Power! to Peace was e'er a friend; Prop} 1. Daughter of Jove, relentless Power, Adv. 1. the pomp of pow'r, El. 33. Than Pow'r and Genius e'er conspir'd to bless. El. Mas. 76. Employ'd the power of Fairy hands L. S. 4. The power of Magick was no fable. L. S. 78. What is grandeur, what is power? Inst. 57. haughty youth [,] and irritated power. [,] Agr. 26, 28. the power To judge of weights and measures; Agr. 40. The very power he has Agr, 81. Who had such liberal power Agr. 89. With equal power resume that gift, Agr. 90. ignorance! soft salutary power! Ign. 9. hag . . . smiles malignant on the labouring power. Stat. 1 59. The Power of Herbs can other Harms remove, Prop? 79. Powerful. The Father of the powerful spell. Odin 12. The powerful pothooks did so move him, L. S. 86. The powerful Mixture and the midnight Spell; Prop. 3 86. Powers. bade the Magi call the dreadful powers, Agr. 64. Can powers immortal feel the force of years? Ign. 26. the growing Powers Of Nature E. G. 13. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. Praetorian. the Praetorian camp have long rever'd Agr. 117. Praise. Owen's praise demands my song, Owen 1. The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. El. 40. she No vulgar praise, . . . flings; Inst. 79. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. to sound the Victor's Praise, Prop? 32. Of all our Youth the Ambition and the Praise! Prop? 104. Pranks. fPleased with his Prank6, Ch. Cr. 31. Pray. For folks in fear are apt to pray L. S. 90. Prayer. Steal to his closet at the hour of prayer; Shak. 14. Precincts. Left the warm precincts of the chearful day, El. 87. Precious. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. Precipitant. The sun's pale sister, . . . Deserts precipitant her darken'd sphere: Stat. 1 55. Precipitates. ere it precipitates its fall; Stat? 15. Preferred. To Phoebus he prefer'd his case, L. S. 91. Pregnant. Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. Prelate. Ruggieri, Pisa's perfidious Prelate this: Dante 14. Prelates. While frighted prelates bow'd Toph. 2. Prelude. Emits the mass, a prelude of his might; Stat. 1 46. Prepare. The rich repast prepare, Bard 78. Haste, the loom of Hell prepare, F. S. 2. Presages. Th' Event presages, and explores the Cause. E. G. 33. Presence. The Birds his presence greet: Vic. 12. Present. for I was present Agr. 60. Preserve. And the short Marble but preserve a Name, Prop? 100. Press. There the press, and there the din; Owen 24. Presume. what charms presume To break the quiet Odin 27. •{•Here Grub-street Geese presume to joke and jeer, Ch. Cr. 19. Presumptuous. Presumptuous Maid! with looks intent Cat 25. where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. Pretensions. to wake pretensions Drowsier than theirs, Agr. 103. Pretty, fin pretty Dialogue I told Ode 23. Prevail. Force and hardy Deeds of Blood prevail. E. C.44. Prevent. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Stat. 1 23. Prey. See also Evening-prey. To seize their prey the murth'rous band! Eton 59. to dumb Forgetfulness a prey, El. 85. Or drive the infernal Vulture from his Prey. Prop? 90. ind rent his trembling Prey. Dante 84. Prick 102 Protection Ch. Cr. 32. Prop? 107, Ch. Cr. 36. Ch. Cr. 33. Ch. Cr. 35. Inst. 42. Prick. •j-Mortals he loves to prick, Pride. Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 114. o'er the crested pride Of the first Edward Bard 9. heap the shrine of Luxury and Pride El. 71. With modest pride . . . The laureate wreath, . . . she brings, Inst. 83. but that her pride restraint it? Agr. 11. nor fall alone; but crush his pride, Agr. 186. Like old Sesostris with barbaric pride; Ign. 37. Mark where Indolence and Pride, Vie. 61. Too, too secure in youthful pride, Hoel 5. These conscious shame withheld, and pride of noble line. Stat. 1 25. A tiger's pride the victor bore away, Stat. 2 24. There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop? 10. were of his Life the Pride; Priest, ■(■a Peer, a Pimp, or Priest; Prig. •j-Now a pert Prig, he perks Prince. fNow a proud Prince, Princely. and princely Clare, Print. Footsteps lightly print the Ground. El. Pem. 120 ; Mas. 140. Prison, tand thoughts Like Butterflies, their Prison shun Ode 45. Privy. And the mute air are privy to your passion. ^r.23. Prize. She stretch'd in vain to reach the prize. Cat 22. Not all that tempts ... is lawful prize, Cat 41. ambition . . . Display the radiant prize, Agr. 52. The world, the prize; Agr. 153. Probe. who can probe the undiscover'd Wound? Prop? 92. Proclaims. Her eye proclaims her of the Briton-Line; Bard 116. Prodigality. The pomp and prodigality of heav'n. Bent. 20. Produce. drink Nectar that the bees produce, Hoel 17. Profane. Mad Sedition's cry profane, Inst. 5. dares . . . Profane thy inborn royalty of mind: Inst. 81. Profit. 't will profit you, Agr. 12. Profound. Immers'd in rapt'rous thought profound, Adv. 26. avaunt, . . . Ignorance with looks profound, Inst. 3, ■{•ponders, with profound grimace, Ch. Cr. 34. Profusely. Nor on all profusely pours; Owen 6. Progeny. What idle progeny succeed Eton 28. Progress. A thousand rills their mazy progress take: P. P. 4. Prolong. Far and wide the notes prolong. F. S. 60. Prolongs. While Hope prolongs our happier hour, Vie. 33. Promise. blast the vernal Promise of the Year. E.G. 21. Promises. nor B — d's promises been vain, View Nich. 18. Prompts. f Perhaps Thalia prompts a Sonnet Ode 35. Pronounced. Thrice pronounc'd, . . . The thrilling verse Odin 23. Proper. 'T is Willy begs, once a right proper man, Shah. 3. Each in his proper Art should waste the Day: Prop? 62. Prophet. The prophet of Bethel, we read, told a lie: C. C. 27. Prophetess. Prophetess, arise, and say, Odin 52. Prophetess, my spell obey, Odin 59. Prophetess, awake, and say, Odin 74. No boding Maid . . . nor Prophetess of good ; Odin 85. Prophetic. The dust of the prophetic Maid. Odin 20. and Sleep Prophetic of my Woes Dante 27. Prophet's. with a Master's hand, and Prophet's fire, Bard 21. Proposing. Her sisters denying, and Jemmy proposing: C. C. 20. Proselyte. Our mother-church, . . . Blush'd as she bless'd her griesly proselyte; Toph. 6. Prospect. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. Prosperity. By vain Prosperity received, Adv. 23. Prostrate. Prostrate warriors gnaw the ground. Owen 30. The willing homage Of prostrate Rome, Agr. 77. Prostrate with filial reverence I adore. Ign. 10. The prostrate South to the Destroyer yields E. G. 52. Protect. these bones from insult to protect El. 77. Protection. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. Proteus-like 103 Proteus-like. ■j-P, Proteus-like all tricks . . . can shew, Ch.Cr. 43. Proud. how little are the Proud, Spring 19. how indigent the proud, Spring Dods. 19. The Proud are taught to taste of pain, Adv. 6. Yet thou, proud boy, Bar d MS. 75. Nor you, ye Proud, impute to These the fault, El. 37. Forgive, ye Proud, th' involuntary Fault, El. Dods., Pem., Eg., Mas. 37. Proud of the yoke, and pliant to the rod, E. G. 58. too proud to importune; Char. 1. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls ; View 22. Weddell attends your call, and Palgrave proud, Com. Lines I. Proud of its diamond dies, and luxury of light. Tasso 70. fNow a proud Prince, Ch. Cr. 35. Proudly. While proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bar d 72. Side by side as proudly riding, Owen 12. Providence. To Providence, to Him my thoughts I'd raise, Prop? 16. Provoke. Can Honour's voice provoke [awake, MS.] the silent dust, El. 43. Prow. Youth on the prow, Bard 74. Prowled. Imp . . . Who prowl'd the country L. S. 45. Prows. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop? 51. Prude. You know I'm no prude, C. C. 7. Prudence. The mask of prudence; Agr. 49. Prudes. The ghostly Prudes . . . Already had con- demn'd the sinner. L. S. 129. Pry. Into the Drawers and China pry, L. S. 65. Pterelas. Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Stat. 1 5. Puck. fthe Pisgys call him Puck, Ch. Cr. 31. Puddings. For glorious puddings and immortal pies. Shak. 24. Punch. fLiki- Punch, he peeps, Ch. Cr. 30. Puny. a puny 1 Agr. 36. yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 19. Pure. The spirits pure, Eton 49. The pure bev'rage of the bee, din 44. glows with the pure Julian fire, Agr. 50. And bids the pure in heart behold their God. Stanza 4. Purest. many a gem of purest ray El. 53. Purged. Purg'd by the sword, and purified by fire, View 21. Purified. Purg'd by the sword, and purified [beautified, MS.] by fire, View 21. Purling. fPurling streams and cooling breezes Ode 20. Purple. And wake the purple yearl Spring 4. Thro' richest purple . . . Betray 'd a golden gleam. Cat 17. purple Tyrants vainly groan Adv. 7. purple light of Love. P. P. 41. Where he points his purple spear, Owen 33. fPrince, in pompous purple drest, Ch. Cr. 35. Purred. She saw; and purr'd applause Cat 12. Pursue. Glory pursue, and generous Shame, P. P. 64. Pursue the silent Tenour of thy Doom. El. Mas. 88. With whistful eyes pursue the setting sun. El. Mas. 120. Her rapid wings the transient scene pursue, lg»- 34- See a kindred Grief pursue; Vic. 38. The foremost He Flash'd to pursue, Dante 36. Pursued. I have pursued your steps, Agr. 54. she fear'd, or wish'd to be pursued. Agr. 199. Pursu'd his cast, and hurl'd the orb on high; Stat? 9. Pursues. long pursues, with fruitless yell, The Father Odin n. Pursuing. Now pursuing, now retreating, P. P. 32. Pursuit. Be love my youth's pursuit, Prop? 52. Purt. Fame, in the shape of Mr. Purt, L. S. 41. Pye. |In form of Parrot, Pye, or Popinjay. Ch. Cr. 42. fAs K a King, Q represents a Queen, Ch. Cr. 45. jln shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. ■\Q draws her train along the Drawing-room, Ch. Cr. 50. Quaff 104 Rains Quaff. quaff the pendent Vintage as it grows. E. G. 57. Quaint. With gestures quaint, now smiling as in scorn, El. Mas. 125. Quakes. The groaning earth beneath him quakes, Odm MS. 14. Quality, •fthese Flies . . . can boast of one good Quality ; Ode 50. fSIow follow all the quality of State, Ch. Cr. 51. Quarrel. The Godhead would have back'd his quarrel, L.S.93. Quarry. bade him Strike The noble quarry. Agr. 46. Queen. More hideous than their Queen: Eton 84. Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, L. S. 15. The drawing-room of fierce Queen Mary. L. S. 108. the rosy queen Of amorous thefts: Agr. 188. •j-Queen Esther next — how fair e'en after death, Ch. Cr. 9. fThen one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. •fAs K a King, Q represents a Queen, Ch. Cr. 45. Queen's. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach de- clare: P. P. 36. So the Master of Queen's Is as like as two beans; Satire 15. Queensbury. •(•Queer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52. Queer. •j-Queer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52. Quell. in Armenia quell the Parthian force Agr. in. With . . . plough to quell the flinty ground, E. G. 91. Quench. To quench the blushes of ingenuous shame, El. 70. thinks to quench the fire Agr. 84. Quenched. Quench'd in dark clouds of slumber P. P. 23. has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 136. Quick. could they catch ... his quick creation, Bent. 14. could'st thou not gape Quick to devour me? Dante 72. Quicker. the quicker let me die: Prop? 70. Quick-glancing. Quick-glancing to the sun. Spring 30. Quiet. To break the quiet of the tomb? Odin 27. Humble quiet builds her cell, Fie. 53. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop. 3 105. Quire. See Choir. Quite. The times are alter'd quite and clean! L. 5. 136. Quiver. Own'd, ... his quiver ... no protection. I. 5. 95. Quivering. " To arms ! " cried Mortimer, and couch 'd his quiv'ring lance. Bard 14. Anon, with slacken 'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat. 1 51. Quoit. Whoe'er the quoit can wield, Stat. 1 1. R. fThus great R reigns in town, Ch. Cr. 53. fRests in Retirement, little Rural R; Ch. Cr. 54. Rabbit. fWith Rooks and Rabbit burrows Ch. Cr. 56. Race. See also Iron-race. Such is the race of Man: Spring 32. Full many a sprightly race Eton 22. Man's feeble race what Ills await, P. P. 42. Two Coursers of ethereal race, P. P. 105. The winding-sheet of Edward's race. Bard 50. the blood of Agrippina's race, Agr. 38. Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. hath Hyperion roll'd his annual race, Ign. n. Smile not indulgent on the rising Race, E. G. 16. No Giant Race, no Tumult of the Skies, Prop? 35. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop? 58. Racks. This racks the joints, Eton 85. Labour, and Penury, the racks of Pain, P. P. 43. Radiance. Why does yon Orb . . . Obscure his radiance Prop? 34. Radiant. If bright ambition . . . Display the radiant prize, Agr. 52. Rage. Those in the deeper vitals rage: Eton 87. Chill Penury repress'd their noble rage, El. 51. the madding ear Of rage, Agr. 84. With headlong rage and wild affright Hoel 1. Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat. 1 51. Rain. The drenching dews, and driving rain! Odin 33. pour the autumnal rain; Prop? 26. Rains. Swoll'n with new force, and late-descending rains. Tasso 10. Raise 105 Reason Raise. If Mem'ry ... no Trophies raise, El. 38. To raise the cieling's fretted height, L. 5. 5. Shall raise from earth the latent gem Inst. 75. Without a spell to raise, Agr. 16. resentment cannot fail to raise Agr. 25. raise A tempest that shall shake -^.s r - 9°- raise the mortal to a height divine. E. G. 83. To Providence, to Him my thoughts I'd raise, Prop? 16. permit me raise My feeble Voice, Prop? 31. ■("But, tho' Flowers his ardour raise, Ode 15. Raised. yon sanguine cloud, Rais'd by thy breath, Bard 136. the phantom I have raised? Agr. 86. From his dire Food the griesly Fellon raised Dante I. Ramparts. while their rocky ramparts round they see, £. G. 96. Ran. His young ones ran beside him. Dante 32. Randver's. Orkney's woe, and Randver's bane. F. <S. 8. Range. He gives To range the dreary sky : P. P. 51. Rankle. The sweets of kindness . . . Rankle to gall; Agr. 74. Rankling. Jealousy with rankling tooth, Eton 66. Ranks. To paint ... the Ranks of War, Prop? 33. Rapid. Her rapid wings the transient scene pursue, Ig»- 34- through the Skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 50. Rapped. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. Rapt. Rapt in celestial transport they: Inst. 18. Rapture. give To rapture all thy trembling strings. P. P. 2. With torrent rapture, see it pour, P. P. MS. 11. Bright Rapture calls [wakes, Lett. 2 ], Bard 123. Raptures. Their raptures . . . No yesterday, nor morrow know; Vic. 25. Rapturous. Immers'd in rapt'rous thought profound, Adv. 26. Rise the rapturous choir among; Vic. 18. Rare. Teach it ... as somewhat rare Agr. 136. Rase. See Raze. Ratify. Stamp we our vengeance deep, and ratify his doom. Bard 96. Rattle. And up stairs in a whirlwind rattle. L. S. 60. Raven-hair. Who ne'er shall comb his raven-hair, Odin 66. Ravens. far aloof th' affrighted ravens sail; Bard 37. Ray. Such forms, as glitter in the Muse's ray, P. P. 119. that hover'd in thy noontide ray ? Bard MS. 69. warms the nations with redoubled ray. Bard 138. many a gem of purest ray serene, El. 53. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. Lamps, that shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. Rays. dart their intermingled rays, Bent. 23. Raze. your arms shall rase the Tyrian towers, Stat. 1 17. Reach. She stretch'd in vain to reach the prize. Cat 22. Pain can reach [touch, MS.] the Sons of Heav'n! Odin 48. Read. read their hist'ry in a nation's eyes, El. 64. Approach and read (for thou can'st read) El. 115. dreadful powers, That read futurity, Agr. 65. The prophet of Bethel, we read, told a lie: C. C. 27. f First when Pastorals I read, Ode 19. Reading. flf heroic Verse I'm reading Ode 26. Ready. with adventrous oar and ready sail E. G. 104. Realised. And realis'd the beauties which we feign: View 20. Realm. proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bard 72. Realms. Who . . . drags me from the realms of night? Odin 30. From yonder realms . . . Bursts . . . th' indig- nant lay: Inst. 13. obsequious vows From voluntary realms, Agr. 36. from the realms of night my voice ye hear, Agr. 178. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop? 39. Rear. Pours on their scatter'd rear, [etc.] P. P. MS. 52. Sublime their starry fronts they rear; Bard 112. j-F follows fast the fair — and in his rear, Ch. Cr. 15. Rears. High he rears his ruby crest. Owen 22. The flood on either hand its billows rears, Tasso 41. Reason. with Reason and thyself at Strife, El. Mas. 85. Reason's 106 Reins Reason's. By reason's light on resolution's wings, E. G. 75. Reassumed. till substantial Night Has reassum'd [Reassumes, MS.] her ancient right; Odin 92. Reassumes. Reassumes her ancient right; Odin MS. 92. Rebellow. groves rebellow to the roar. P. P. 12. Rebellows. And, clash'd, rebellows with the din of war. Stat. 1 31. Rebound. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat. 2 17. Rebrace. rebrace The slacken'd sinews of . . . age. Agr. 139. Recalled. And Phoebus' Son recall'd Androgeon Prop? 84. Receive. Receive a worthier load; Stat} 19. Received. By vain Prosperity received, Adv. 23. Recess. Me may Castalia's sweet recess detain, Prop? 2. Recks. it rekes not That I advise thee. Dante 17. Reclined. At ease reclin'd in rustic state Spring 17. The pensive Selima reclin'd, Cat 5. So her white neck reclin'd, Agr. 195. f reclined beneath the Tree-zes; Ode 22. Recollection. with a blush on recollection Own'd, L. S. 94. Recompence. See Recompense. Recompense. Heav'n did a recompence . . . send: El. 122. Red. And sad Philippi, red with Roman Gore: Prop. 3 46. Red-breast. The Red-breast [Redbreast, Mas.] loves to build . . . there, El. Pern. 119; Mas. 138. Reddening. redning Phoebus lifts his golden Fire: West 2. Redeem. Redeem, what Crassus lost, Prop? 54. Redning. See Reddening. Redolent. And, redolent of joy and youth, Eton 19. Redoubled. warms the nations with redoubled ray. Bard 138. Redundant. Nile redundant o'er his Summer-bed E. G. 101. Re-echo. Severn shall re-eccho with affright Bard 54. Refine. Their little wants, their low desires refine, E. G. 82. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. Refined. with courtly tongue refin'd, Inst. 80. Reflected. in four Faces saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 63. Reflection. grave and undisturb'd reflection Agr. 82. A sigh of soft reflection. Bent. 28. Reflection's. Smiles . . . Soft Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 30. Reft. Reft of a crown, he yet may share Bard 79. for then Hunger had reft my Eye-sight Dante 79. Refuge. sad refuge from the storms of Fate! P. P. 45. Refuse. fQueer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52. Regal. Close by the regal chair Bard 80. Owen . . . Lord of every regal art, Owen 7. Rich streams of regal bounty pour'd, Inst. 52. Chains of regal honour deck, Hoel 14. Regardless. Regardless of the sweeping Whirlwind's sway, Bard 75. regardless of their doom Eton 51. Regions. And unknown regions dare descry: Eton 37. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop? 19. Rehearse. Conan's name, my lay, rehearse, Conan 1. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop? 31. Reign. The limits of their little reign, Eton 36. Thro' verdant vales, and Ceres' golden reign: P. P. 9. Molest her ancient solitary reign. El. 12. If the son reign, the mother perishes. Agr. 67. reign the son! Agr. 68. Glad I revisit thy neglected reign, Ign. 5. Climes, where Winter holds his Reign, E. G. 5. Here reign the blustering North and blighting East, View 9. Reigns. Another Arthur reigns. Bard. MS. 1 10. He reigns, the rest is heav'n's; Agr. 69. when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. •(Thus great R reigns in town, Ch. Cr. 53. Reins. We the reins to slaughter give, F. S. 33. the reins of empire El. Dods., Pem., Mas. 47. Reject 107 Requires Reject. To reject him for such peccadillos, were odd; C.C. 29. Rejects. She half accepts, and half rejects, my Fires, Prop. 3 22. Rejoice. Here . . . cormorants rejoice, Vteu) 7. Rekes. See Recks. Relate. Dost . . . their artless tale relate; El. 94; Mas. 78. Not Marius' Cimbrian Wreaths would I relate, Prop? 39. Release. The Hand that can my captive heart release, Prop? 87. Relentless. Daughter of Jove, relentless Power, Adv. I. Relies. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. Relieved, and thus relieved their care: Tasso 26. Religion. scarce religion does supply Her rnutter'd re- quiems, Bard MS. 73. Reluctance. With fond reluctance, yielding modesty, Agr. 197. Relumes. with silver light Relumes her crescent Orb Prop? 22. Remain. Long as of youth the joyous hours remain, Prop? 1. A little Verse my All that shall remain; Prop? 1 01. Remains. What length of sea remains, Tasso 31. That which yet remains ... I shall unfold. Dante 18. I grop'd About among their cold Remains Dante j%. Remedy. For Ills unseen what Remedy is found? Prop? 91. Remember. I well remember too Agr. 60. Remind. I might remind my mistress Agr. 107. Remorse keen Remorse with blood defil'd, Eton 78. penitence, and vain remorse, Agr. 179. Remote. ■{■Remote from cities lives Ch. Cr. 55. Remotest. cither Pole, and Life's remotest Bounds, E. G. 25. Remove. Till time shall every grief remove, Clerke 15. The Power of Herb6 can other Harms remove, Prop? 79. Dante 84. Agr. 75- Bard-]%. P. P. 60. E.G. 35. C. C. 30. Rend. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop? 47. Renew. hasty to renew The hellish Feast, Dante 83. Renown. Young Williams fought for England's fair re- nown; Williams 2. Rent. and rent his trembling Prey. Repaid. benefits too great To be repaid, Repair. The lady Janes and Joans repair, L. S. 99. See the Wretch, ... At length repair his vigour lost, Vic. 47. The Melian's Hurt Machaon could repair, Pro/>. 3 81. Repairs. To-morrow he repairs the golden flood, Bar d 137. Repast. The rich repast prepare, Repeat. To hear the savage Youth repeat Repel. By Force repel the Foe, Repents. Besides, he repents — Repine. These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, West 5. Reply. The sportive kind reply: Spring^!. They smile, but reply not — Am. Lines 8. Repose. The panting herds repose: Spring 22. hush'd in grim repose, expects his evening-prey. Bard 76. Leave me, leave me to repose. Odin 50, 58, 72. Then I leave thee to repose. Odin 80. they alike in trembling hope repose, El. 127. And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. Fast by th' umbrageous vale lull'd to repose, Prop? 3. And all the scenes, that hurt the grave's repose, Prop? 49. I favour her repose. Prop? 18. Represents. fAs K a King, Q represents a Queen, Ch. Cr. 45. Repressed. Chill Pi-nury rcpress'd their noble rage, El. 51. Reauiems. Her mutter'd requiems, Bard MS. 74. Require. A different Object do these Eyes require: West 6. Requires. pious drops the closing eye requires; El. 90. Art it requires, and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. Resentment 108 Revive Resentment. fierce resentment cannot fail to raise Agr. 25. Reside. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop? 9. Residence. By residence, by marriage, Shah 12. Resign. the palm despair'd resign; Stat. 1 23. Resigned. who . . . This pleasing anxious being e'er re- sign'd ? El. 86. In agony, in death resign'd, Gierke 7. In lingYing pain, in death resign 'd, Clerke MS. 9. Resistless, with resistless sweep Vic. 59. Resolution. Here Holland form'd the pious resolution View 2. Resolution's. By reason's light on resolution's wings, E. G. 75. Resounding. See Long-resounding. Respect. ties ... Of old respect and gratitude, Agr. 114. Respite. Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop. 2 40. Responsive. Responsive to the cuckow's note, Spring 6. Rest. Their . . . dance They leave, in dust to rest. Spring 40. That calls me from the bed of rest? Odin 36. Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest, EL 59- He reigns, the rest is heav'n's; Agr. 69. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams II. The Master of Christ By the rest is enticed; Satire 24. The Master of St. John's Like the rest of the Dons. Satire 34. Restrain. Thy passing Courser's 6lacken'd Speed restrain; Prop. 3 102. Restrained. but that her pride restrain'd it? Agr. 12. Rests. He rests among the Dead. Bard 68. Here rests his head El. 117. f Rests in Retirement, little Rural R; Ch. Cr. 54. Resume. Fierce War and faithful Love Resume Bard Lett.' 127. chearful Fields resume their green Attire: West 4. With equal power resume that gift, Agr. 90. if you resume your Gift; Dante 66. Retain. with Mem'ry to retain, E. G. 30. While to retain the envious Lawn she tries, Prop. 3 23. Retains. Nor . . . Warmth, nor genial Juice retains E. G. 3. Retired. Say, she retir'd to Antium; Agr. 7. Retirement. fRests in Retirement, little Rural R; Ch. Cr. 54. Retires. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop? 19. Retreat. •(-lives in lone Retreat, Ch. Cr. 55. Retreating. Now pursuing, now retreating, P. P. 32. Retrieved. One false step is ne'er retriev'd Cat 38. Return. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. But none from Cattraeth's vale return, Hoel 20. Ere the spring he would return — Song 2. Returning. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. Returns. The soft Returns of Gratitude E. G. 34. Reveal. If the thin Coan Web her Shape reveal, Prop? 9. Revels. Vice, that revels in her chains. P. P. 80. Revenge. Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breath; Bard 26. My great revenge shall rise; Agr. 121. My Wrongs, and from them judge of my Revenge. Dante 15. Revere. Revere his Consort's faith, Bard 89. Revered. have long rever'd With custom'd awe, Agr. 117. Reverence. Say you saw her Yielding due reverence Agr. 4. Prostrate with filial reverence I adore. Ign. 10. Reverend. from the dust uprear his reverend head, Agr.i^i. Reveres. She reveres herself and thee. Inst. 82. Reverted. yielding modesty, And oft reverted eye, Agr. 198. descries With forward and reverted eyes. Vic. 28. Revisit. Glad I revisit thy neglected reign. Ign. 5. Revive. The gen'rous spark extinct revive, Adv. 45. Would'st thou revive the deep Despair, Dante 4. Revived 109 Rise Revived. anew revived, with silver light Prop. 2 21. Reward. What the bright reward we gain? Inst. 59. Verse, the hero's sole reward. Conan 4. Rhetoric. But soon his rhetorick forsook him, L. S. 117. Rhime. See Rime. Rhimed. See Rimed. Rhimes. See Rimes. Rhine. As on the Rhine, when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. Rhyme. See Rime. Rhymes. See Rimes. Rich. the rich stream of music winds along P. P. 7. The rich repast prepare, BardjS. page Rich with the spoils of time El. 50. Rich windows that exclude the light, L. S. 7. Rich streams of regal bounty pour'd, Inst. 52. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. Riches. The riches of the earth, Agr. 78. Richest. Thro* richest purple . . . Betray'd a golden gleam. Cat 17. Richly. Richly paint the vernal year: P. P. 90. Rid. commission To rid the manour of such vermin. L. S. 52. Ride. 't is time to ride: F. S. Pem. 61. High on her car, behold the grandam ride Ign. 36. on frail floats to distant cities ride, E. G. 106. Riding. While proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bard 72. Side by side as proudly riding, Owen 12. Rigby's. Nor Mungo's, Rigby's, Bradshaw's friendship vain, View 18. Right. Right against the eastern gate, Odin 17. till substantial Night Has reassum'd her ancient right; Odin 92. tenacious of thy right divine, Ign. 15. T is Willy begs, once a right proper man, Shak. 3. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand, Stat. 1 15. Rightly. Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop? 15. Rigid. thy rigid lore With patience . . . she bore: Adv. 13. Rigor. face the rigour Of bleak Germania's snows. Agr. 109. Rigour. See Rigor. Rill. beside the rill, Nor up the lawn, El. in. Rills. A thousand rills their mazy progress take:' P. P. 4. Whate'er . . . Floats into Lakes, and bubbles into rills; Tasso 54. Rime. Thrice he traced the runic rhyme; Odin 22. uncouth rhime and shapeless sculpture El. Mas. 79. listens to the rhyme. Inst. 26. She tunes my easy Rhime, Prop. 3 6. fSeeds of Poetry and Rhime Ode I. f And have loved their love in rhyme: Rond. 14. Rimed. fand my head Rhimed on, Ode 22. Rimes. uncouth rhimes [rhime, Mas.] and shapeless sculpture El. 79. tardy rhymes that us'd to linger on, Bent. 9. Rinda. A wond'rous Boy shall Rinda bear, Odin 65. Ring. The shrieks of death, thro' Berkley's roofs that ring, Bard 55. Hauberk crash, and helmet ring. F. S. 24. I 'd in the ring knit hands, Prop? 6. Rings. And all the town rings of his swearing and roaring! C. C. 16. Ripen. fStill to ripen 'em is wanted; Ode 4. Ripened. She swept, she hiss'd, she ripen'd and grew rough, Par. on Ep. 2. Ripening. Further they pass, where ripening minerals flow, Tasso 57. Rise. Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Eton 71. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. Hence rise my fears. Agr. 56. My great revenge shall rise, Agr. 121. Forbids . . . her Shades to rise, E. G. 7. distant cities . . . That rise and glitter E. G. 107. Rise, my soul! on wings of fire, Vic. 17. Rise the rapturous choir among; Vie. 18. So from our works sublimcr fumes shall rise; Shak. 22. When you rise from your Dinner as light as before, Couplet 1. When mountain-high the waves disparted rise; Tasso 40. No Mountain-Structures in my Verse should rise, Prop? 36. Riseing 110 Rome Riseing. See Rising. Rising. O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, P. P. 40. Gone To salute the rising Morn [Day, MS.]. Bard 70. Smile not indulgent on the rising Race,£. G. 16. The birth of rivers riseing to their course, Tasso 52. How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop? 23. Rites. sacrifice perform'd with barb'rous rites Agr. 62. Rival. The rival of her crown and of her woes, Inst. 44. River. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. The river boil'd beneath, Tasso 24. River's. he led Beneath the obedient river's inmost bed; Tasso 44. Rivers. The birth of rivers riseing to their course, Tasso 52. Riveted. riveted His eyes in fearful extasy: Agr. 169. Rivets. •f-Cent'ring, rivets heart to heart, Rond. 30. Road. In climes beyond the solar road, P. P. 54. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road Tasso 37. Roam. shaggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. Roar. groves rebellow to the roar. P. P. 12. Echoing to the battle's roar. Owen 26. Thro' the wild waves as they roar, Inst. 89. Or the bull, with sullen roar, . . . advance? Caradoc 2. parting surges round the vessel roar; Stat? 21. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar, Tasso 6. Roaring. Deep in the roaring tide he plung'd Bard 144. the town rings of his swearing and roaring! C.C. 16. What a pother is here about wenching and roar- ing! C. C. 23. Roast. Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Shak. 18. Robed. Robed in the sable garb of woe, Bard 17. Rochester's. 'Tis just like the picture in Rochester's book; C. C. 12. Rock. On a rock ... the Poet stood; Bard 15. The eyeless Cyclops heav'd the craggy rock; Stat? 19. The pendent rock, Irion's whirling wheel, Prop? 46. Rocks. The rocks and nodding groves rebellow P. P. 12. Nor fear the rocks, nor seek the shore: Inst. 92. Rocky. Talymalfra's rocky shore - Owen 25. while their rocky ramparts round they see, E. G. 96. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams IO. Rod. the rod [reins, Dods., Pem., Mas.] of empire El. 47. Proud of the yoke, and pliant to the rod, E. G. 58. His head a chaplet bore, his hand a Rod. Tasso 16. Rode. Nor second He, that rode sublime P. P. 95. Down the yawning steep he rode, Odin 3. She rode triumphant o'er the . . . world; Ign. 28. Lanfranc there And Sigismundo, and Gualandi rode Dante 33. Roderic's. Owen . . . Fairest flower of Roderic's stem, Owen 3. Roll. Who measured out the years, and bad the seasons roll; Prop? 38. Rolled. hath Hyperion roll'd his annual race, Ign. II. their Kings, their Gods were roll'd away. E. G. 49. And now in dust the polish'd ball he roll'd, Stat. 1 41. A shining border round the margin roll'd, Stat? 26. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. Rolling. To chase the rolling circle's speed, Eton 29. Now rowling down the steep amain, P. P. 10. the rolling Orb, that gives the Day, E. G. 23. Indolence and Pride, Softly rolling, side by side, Vic. 62. fTill again the rolling Sun Bursts 0^43, Rolls. Backward Meinai rolls his flood; Owen 28. Roman. And sad Philippi, red with Roman Gore: Prop? 46. Rome. lord, That broke the bonds of Rome. Inst. 47. The willing homage Of prostrate Rome Agr. 77. the eye of Rome, And the Praetorian camp Agr. 116. Again the buried Genius of old Rome Agr. 141. Roofs 111 Rude Roofs. The shrieks of death, thro' Berkley's roofs that ring, Bard 55. Rooks. ■j-With Rooks and Rabbit burrows Ch. Cr. 56. Room. See also Drawing-room, Withdraw- ing-room. Give ample room, and verge enough Bard 51. Give . . . Cares and endless Wishes room; El. Mas. 86. Tloots. beech, That wreathes its old fantastic roots El. 102. genial Juice retains Their Roots to feed, E. G. 4. ■jTares of similes choak the roots, Ode 11. Rose. the rose of snow ... we spread: Bard 91. the new Fragrance of the breathing Rose. E. G. 56. the paler rose, The rival of her crown Inst. 43. Rose, vb. My Lady rose, L. S. 131. From table she rose, C. C. 21. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. Tell me, whence their sorrows rose: Odin 79. Rose's. There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop? 10. Rosy. Theirs buxom health of rosy hue, Eton 45. the rosy queen Of amorous thefts: Agr. 188. where rosy Pleasure leads, Vic. 37. Rosy-bosomed. Lo! where the rosy-bosom'd Hours . . . appear, Spring 1. Rosy-crowned. The rosy-crowned Loves are seen P. P. 28. Rough. Brush'd by the hand of rough Mischance, Spring 38. A heart that . . . will . . . Gain the rough heights, Agr. 52. rough, stubborn souls, That struggle with the yoke. Agr. 126. The rough abode of want and liberty, E. G. 97. She swept, she hiss'd.she ripen'd and grew rough, Par. on Ep. 2. Round. The fair round face. Cat 8. flowers, that round them blow, P. P. 5- What Terrors round him wait! Bar d 60. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bard 120. Thousand Banners round him burn: Owen 32. thev . . . Run hurry-skurry round the floor, L. 5.63. While bright-eyed Science watches round: Inst. II. as the choral warblings round him swell, Inst. 24. round heav'n's altars shed The fragrance Inst. 73. while their rocky ramparts round they see, E. G. 96. shades, that . . . blacken round our weary way, Vic. 35. rolling, side by side, Their dull, but daily round. Vic. 63. And parting surges round the vessel roar; Stat. 2 21. A shining border round the margin roll'd, Stat. 2 26. The hissing terrors round Alecto's head, Prop. 2 42. •fin a perpetual round, Ch. Cr. 37. fRabbit burrows round his seat — Ch. Cr. 56. Rouse. The . . . horn, No more shall rouse them El. 20. her nod Can rouse eight hardy legions, Agr. 108. Roused. Rous'd by the shout of millions: Agr. 142. By acclamations roused, came tow'ring on. Stat. 1 14. Or roused by sprightly sounds from out the trance, Prop. 2 5. Rout. Hasty, hasty Rout is there, Owen 34. Rove. Mutt'ringhis . . . fancies he would rove, El. 106. Roves. where'er the Goddess roves, P. P. 63. Row. in glitt'ring row Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 11. •jThe Pleasantest Person in the Christ-Cross row. Ch. Cr. 44. Rowling. See Rolling. Royal. High potentates, and dames of royal birth, Inst. 37. Royalty. dares . . . Profane thy inborn royalty of mind: Inst. 81. Rubbers. And keep my Lady from her Rubbers. L. S. 144. Rubellius. Rubellius lives, And Sylla has his friends, Agr. 99. Rubies. And rubies flame, with sapphire's heavenly blue, Tasso 68. Ruby. High he rears his ruby crest. Owen 22. Ruddy. Dear, as the ruddy drops that warm my heart, Bar d 4 1 . Ere the ruddy sun be set, F. S. 21. Rude. the rude and moss-grown beech Spring 13. The rude Forefathers of the hamlet El. 16. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form E. G. 26. How the rude surge its sandy bounds control; Prop. 2 37. Ruffled 112 Sage Ruffled. With ruffled plumes, and flagging wing: P. P. 22. Rugged. Stern rugged Nurse! thy rigid lore Adv. 13. Beneath those rugged elms, that yew-tree's shade, El. 13. Ruggieri. Ruggieri, Pisa's perfidious Prelate this: Dante 13. Ruin. Ruin seize thee, ruthless King! Bard 1. in ruin hurl'd, Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 93. There . . . Conflict fierce, and Ruin wild, Owen 38. The threats of pain and ruin El. 62. sink the traitor in his mother's ruin. Agr. 187. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop? 31. Ruins. the ruins that we feign: View MS. 20. Rule. th' inferior laws that rule our clay: E. G. 80. Rummage. They . . . Rummage his Mother, pinch his Aunt, L. S. 59. Rumor. So Rumor says. L. S. 73. Run. Still as they run they look behind, Eton 38. Yet oft before his infant eyes would run P. P. 118. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. they . . . Run hurry-skurry round the floor, L. S. 63. In swifter measures animated run, Bent. 11. Rung. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous bor- ders. Toph. 7. Runic. Thrice he traced the runic rhyme; Odin 22. Rural. ■{•Rests in Retirement, little Rural R; Ch. Cr. 54. Rush. To rush, and sweep them from the world! Hoel 4. Rushed. The river boil'd beneath, and rush'd toward the Main, Tasso 24. Rushing. brave the savage rushing from the wood, E. G. 93. Rushy. Beside some water's rushy brink Spring 15. Where rushy Camus' slowly-winding flood, Ign.T,. Rustic. At ease reclin'd in rustic state Spring 17. teach the rustic moralist to die. El. 84. Let not Ambition mock their rustic toil, El. Mas. 29. New-born flocks, in rustic dance, Vic. 9. Swift shoots the Village-maid in rustic play Tasso 19. Rustling. not in buff, But rustling in their silks L. S. 24. Ruthless. Ruin seize thee, ruthless King! Bard 1. fS, sails the Swan Ch. Cr. 57. Sable. Wisdom in sable garb array'd Adv. 25. Robed in the sable garb of woe, Bard 17. Is the sable Warriour fled? Bard 67. Each bestride her sable steed. F. S. 63. His sable Sons with nearer Course surrounds E. G. 24. Sabler. Chastised by sabler tints of woe; Vic. 42. Sacred. See also Sacred Way. the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94. such, as wand'ring near her sacred Bow'r, E/.Dods. 11. the sacred Calm, that broods around, El. Mas. 81. sacred age! Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. A heart, within whose sacred cell Clerke 3. Sacred tribute of the bard, Conan 3. Sacred Way. Move through the Sacred Way and vainly threat, Prop? 52. Sacrifice. To bitter Scorn a sacrifice, Eton 73. sacrifice perform'd with barb'rous rites Agr. 62. Sad. sad refuge from the storms of Fate! P. P. 45. Till the sad Nine in Greece's evil hour, P. P. 77. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bard 40. with dirges due in sad array El. 113. And sad Chatillon, Inst. 41. And sad Philippi, red with Roman Gore: Prop? 46. Sad with the Fears of Sleep, Dante 49. Saddled. saddled strait his coal-black steed; Odin 2. Sadly. A bad face which did sadly molest her. Mrs. Keene 2. Sadly-pleasing. Pity, dropping soft the sadly-pleasing tear. Adv. 32. Safe. safe and laughing in his sleeve, L. S. 75. Thus far we're safe. Agr. 188. Safety. more to Innocence their Safety owe El. Mas. 75. Sage. There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. When lo! appears The wondrous Sage: Tasso 12. Said 113 Say Said. This pencil take (she said), P. P. 89. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, View 17. He said, and scornful flung th' unheeded weight Stat. 1 21. Scarce had he said, Tasso 39. Sail. far aloof th* affrighted ravens sail; Bard 37. with adventrous oar and ready sail E. G. 104. Sailing. ng with supreme dominion P. P. 116. Sailors. Sailors to tell of Winds and Seas delight, Prop? S3- Sails. There the Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 15. fS, sails the Swan Ch. Cr. 57. Saint. See also St. The murder 'd saint Inst. 46. Sainted. There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. Sake. hates the Tale of Troy for Helen's Sake. Prop? 74. Salutary, ignorance! soft salutary power! Ign. 9. Salute. Gone to salute the rising Morn. Bar d 70. Same. The Master of Maudlin In the same dirt is dawdling; Satire 8. The Master of Sidney Is of the same kidney; Satire 10. The Master of Peter's Has all the same features; Satire 3 2. Sand. Earl Goodwin trembled for his neighbouring sand; View 6. Sands. on his native sands The Dragon-Son . . . stands; Owen 19. Oceans unknown, inhospitable Sands! Tasso 32. Sandy. How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop. 2 37. Sangrida. Sangrida, terrific maid, F. S. Whar. 17. Sangrida and Hilda see, Join . . . to aid; F. S. 18. Sanguine. yon sanguine cloud, . . . has quench'd the Orb of day? Bard 135. Saphire-blaze. See Sapphire-blaze. Sapphire-blaze. The living Throne, the saphire-blaze, P. P. 99. Sapphire's. And rubies flame, with sapphire's heavenly blue, Tasso 68. Sat. See also Sate. Malignant Fate sat by, and smil'd Cat 28. Satan's. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. Toph. 8. Sate. See also Sat. By the moss-grown pile he sate; Odin 18. The Court was sate, L. S. 97. That Day, and yet another, mute we sate, Dante 70. Satin-doublet. His high-crown'd hat, and sattin-doublet, L. S. 14. Satire. Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, wit, and satire: L. S. 30. attend To the Satire I 've pen'd Satire 2. Sattin-doublet. See Satin-doublet. Savage. To hear the savage Youth repeat P. P. 60. brave the savage rushing from the wood, E. G. 93. Save. Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, El. 7. Save that from yonder ivy-mantled tow'r El. 9. Their human passions now no more, Save Charity, Inst. 50. But none . . . return, Save Aeron brave, Hoel 21. Save, vb. To save thy secret soul from nightly fears, Bard 7. Yet hcp'd, that he might save his bacon: L. S. 126. And so God save our noble King, L. S. 141. could not save His all Gierke MS. II. Better the roast meat from the fire to save, Shak. 18. Saw. Her . . . emerald eyes she saw; Cat 12. The hapless Nymph with wonder saw: Cat 19. The living Throne, the saphire-blaze . . . He saw; P. P. 101. thro' the church-way path we saw him borne — El. 114. Say you saw her Yielding due reverence Agr. 3. Saw the snowy whirlwind fly; Vic. 22. I saw them bow, Toph. 3. I saw methought Towards Pisa's Mount, Dante 28. in four Faces saw my own Despair reflected, Dante 62. I saw 'em fall; Dante 76. Saxon. Mirrors of Saxon truth and loyalty Bard MS. 71. Say. Say, father Thames, Eton 21. Say, has he giv'n in vain P. P. 48. Prophetess, arise, and say, Odin 52. Once again arise, and say, Odin 60. Prophetess, awake, and say, Odin 74. Say from whence their sorrows rose: Odin MS. 79. Sayest 114 Scorned some hoary-headed Swain may say, El. 97. Say you saw her Yielding . . . reverence Agr. 4. Say, she retir'd to Antium; Agr. 7. tell me! say Agr. 92. say we sound The trump of liberty; Agr. 121. Oh say, successful dost thou still oppose Ign. 13. Oh say — she hears me not, Ign. 23. Say then, ... by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. They say he's no Christian, C. C. 15. As to Trinity Hall We say nothing at all. Satire 36. Ah! say, Fellow-swains, how these symptoms be- fell me? Am. Lines 7. In brief whate'er she do, or say, or look, Prop. 3 27. awhile draw near, And say, Prop? 106. Attend, and say if he have injured me. Dante 21. •j-But, my Dear, these Flies, they say, Ode 49. fSome have loved, and loved (they say) Rond. 5. Sayest. Say'st thou I must be cautious, Agr. 85, Says. So Rumor says. L. S. 73. "Lord ! sister," says Physic to Law, C. C. 5. "I don't know," says Law, C. C. II, Scaly. Their scaly armour's Tyrian hue, Cat 16. Scan. Exact my own defects to scan, Adv. 47. Scant. what scant Light That . . . Tower admitted Dante 22. 'Scaped. See Escaped. Scarce. scarce religion does supply Her mutter'd re- quiems, Bard MS. 73. And scarce Ulysses 'scaped his giant arm. Stat. 2 23. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar, Tasso 6. Scarce had he said, Tasso 39. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop. 2 43. The Morn had scarce commenc'd, when I awoke: Dante 41. Scarcely. scarcely dar'd On expectation's . . . wing to soar Agr. 41. Scare. Sour visages, enough to scare ye, L. S. 106. Scared. Scared at thy frown terrific, Adv. 17. he stood trembling, Scar'd at the sound, Agr. 32. Scares. The triple dog that scares the shadowy kind, Prop. 2 44. Scatter. scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, EL 63. scatter with a free, though frugal, Hand E. G. 17. Scattered. their scatter'd rear, P. P. MS. 52. the sounds, that . . . scatter'd wild dismay, Bard 10. There scatter'd oft, the earliest of the Year, El. Pern. 117; Mas. 137. Scatters. Scatters from her pictur'd urn Thoughts, that breath, P. P. 109. Scatters his freshest, tenderest green. Vic. 8. the song-thrush there Scatters his loose notes Birds 2. Scene. Her rapid wings the transient scene pursue, This spacious animated Scene survey E. G. 22. o'er the living scene Scatters . . . green. Vic. 7. Scenes. what solemn scenes on Snowdon's height Bard 105. what [solemn, Lett. 1 ] scenes of Heaven on Snow- don's height Bard MS. 105. Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. And all the scenes, that hurt the grave's repose, Prop. 2 49. Sceptered. Perching on the scept'red hand P. P. 20. Be thine Despair, and scept'red Care, Bard 141. And scepter'd Alexandria's captive Shore, Prop. 3 45. Sceptre. The massy sceptre o'er thy slumb'ring line? Ign. 16. Schooled. school'd by fear To bow the supple knee, Agr. 100. Schoolman's. The schoolman's glory, and the churchman's boast. Ign . 32. Science. Where grateful Science still adores Eton 3. Fair Science frown'd not on his . . . birth, El. 119. While bright-eyed Science watches round : Inst. 11. From fortune, pleasure, science, love, he flew, Williams 7. Be love my youth's pursuit, and science crown my Age. Prop? 52. Scold. In harmless society guttle and scold. C. C. 4. Scorn. To bitter scorn a sacrifice, Eton 73. alike they scorn the pomp of tyrant-Power, P. P. 79. now smiling as in scorn, El. 105. the Victim of her Scorn, Prop? 77. Scorned. And scorn 'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. Scornful 115 See Scornful. And scornful flung th' unheeded weight Stat. 1 21. Scotland. Scotland, . . . Far and wide the notes prolong. F. S. 59. Scourge. Whose iron scourge and tort 'ring hour Adv. 3. The scourge of Heav'n. Bard 60. Scowl. Fell Thirst and Famine scowl Bard%i. Scratch. The Bishop of Chester, ... If you scratch him will fester. Ext. Ktene 4. Scream. Here sea-gulls scream, View 7. Screaming. With screaming Horror's funeral cry, Adv. 39. Screams. The famish'd Eagle screams, Bard^S. Scribbles. And all his [he, Lett. 4 ] scribbles, tear. Shak. 16. Sculks. See Skulks. Sculpture. W;th . . . shapeless sculpture deck'd, El. 79. Sculptured. The laurell'd Triumph and the sculptured Carr; Prop. 3 34. Scythia. Has Scythia breath'd the . . . Cloud of War; E. G. 47. Sea. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. What length of sea remains, Tasso 31. Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop. 3 38. Sea-encircled. thy sea-encircled coast. P. P. 82. Sea-gulls. Here sea-gulls scream, View 7. Seal. The Seal, and Maces, danc'd before him. L. S. 12. Sealed. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; Williams 6. Search. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop? 19. Seas. Sailors to tell of Winds and Seas delight, Prop. 3 59. Seasons. what seasons can control . . . the soul, E. G. 72. Who measured out the year, and bad the seasons roll; Prop? 38. Seat. ambition from her craggy seat Apr. 51. Thou Seat "f the Mines! Satire 4. ■{■Rabbit burrows round his seat — Ch. Cr. 56. Second. To breathe a second spring. Eton 20. Nor second He, that rode sublime P. P. 95. And thou Mecaenas, be my second Care; Prop. 3 42. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. Secret. Jealousy . . . That inly gnaws the secret heart, Eton 67. To save thy secret soul from nightly fears, Bard 7. wand'ring near her secret bow'r, El. II. a secret and dead hour of night, Agr. 61. My lines a secret sympathy Bent. 26. A pang, to secret sorrow dear; Clerke 13. Of many a flood they view'd the secret source, Tasso 51. Secrets. The secrets of the Abyss to spy. P. P. 97. Secure. Secure of Fate, the Poet stood, Bar d Lett. 1 18. Here, . . . secure from misery, lies A child, Child 1. Too, too secure in youthful pride, Hoel 5. The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat? 1 1. Against the stream the waves secure he trod, Tasso 15. Securely. Be gay securely; Agr. 192. Sedition's. Mad Sedition's cry profane, Inst. 5. See. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. Headlong, impetuous, see it pour; P. P. 11. a griesly band, I see them sit, Bard 45. I see The different doom our Fates assign. Bard 139. See the griesly texture grow! F. S. 9. Sangrida, and Hilda see, F. S. 18. Ne'er again his likeness see; F. S. 46. see The pure bev'rage of the bee, Odin 43. Nor see the sun's departing beam, Odin 68. Foremost . . . The venerable Marg'ret see! Inst. 66. while their rocky ramparts round they see, E. G. 96. See . . . each transitory thought Bent. 5. See a kindred Grief pursue; Vic. 38. See the Wretch, that long has tost Vic. 45. Though now a book, and interleaved you see. Shak. 4. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat? 12. The Po was there to see, Tasso 55. ■ -)• and thousand beauties see Prop And many a copious Narrative you'll see Prop? 29. thou shalt see me . . . give loose Dante 8. filer daughters deck'd most daintily I see, Ch. Cr. 3. Seeds 116 Seraph-wings fSee Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. ■f-methinks we see, Ch. Cr. 21. ■{■See Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view; Ch. Cr. 26. ■(•See Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch. Cr. 28. •fin Pond you see him come, Ch. Cr. 39. Seeds. ■(-Seeds of Poetry and Rhime Ode 1. Seek. No farther seek his merits to disclose, El. 125. Nor fear the rocks, nor seek the shore: Inst. 92. difficult the toil To seek your Hero Tasso 28. f Long to seek a mutual heart, Rond. 2, 10, 18, 26, 34. Seem. My weary soul they seem to sooth, Eton 18. walls that seem to mock my shame, Agr. 156. To different Climes seem different Souls assign'd ? E.G. 39. she seem to close Her languid Lids, Prop? 17. And hoary Nile with pensive Aspect seem Prop? 49. Seemed. will seem'd wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. vigorous he seem'd in years, Tasso 12. Seeming. his plain soldier's oath, and honest seeming. Agr. 151. Seems. •(■Now seems a Penny, Ch. Cr. 38. ■(•And seems small difference the sounds between; Ch. Cr. 46. Seen. Two angel forms were seen Cat 14. thou hast seen ... a sprightly race Eton 21. A griesly troop are seen, Eton 82. As by the Impious thou art seen Adv. 37. The rosy-crowned Loves are seen P. P. 28. Oft have we seen him El. 97. Him have we seen El. Mas. 117. Styack has often seen the sight L. S. 103. When he the solemn hall had seen; L. S. 118. I . . . Have seen your soul, and wonder'd Agr. 55- Have ye seen the dusky boar, Caradoc 1. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; View 22. ■(■And variegated Fancy's seen Ode 17. Seer. So mov'd the Seer, Tasso 23. Sees. your servant's fears, who sees the danger Agr. 24. Let him feel Before he sees me. Agr. 164. sees far off with an indignant groan, E. G. 62. Brown sees thee sitting on his nose's tip, Com. Lines 4. Seest. Know, thou seest In me Count Ugolino, Dante 12. Seize. To seize their prey the murth'rous band! Eton 59. Ruin seize thee, ruthless King! Bard I. Seized. Their hands he seized, Tasso 43. Self. Meek Newton's self bends from his state sub- lime, Inst. 25. But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall Shak. 11. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. Toph. 8. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop? 31. Self-pleasing. Self-pleasing Folly's idle brood, Adv. 18. Selima. The pensive Selima reclin'd, Cat 5. Semblance. by Juno, It bears a noble semblance. Agr. 120. Senate. Even in the servile senate, Agr. 123. Senate's. the senate's joint applause, Agr. 77. Senates. Th' applause of list'ning senates El. 61. Send. Some speedy aid to send. Cat 33. thy Sire to send on earth Virtue . . . design'd, Adv. 9. from Pomfret's walls shall [shalt, Lett. 1 ] send Bard MS. 75. Heav'n did a recompence . . . send: El. 122. a glance . . . They send Inst. 20. And furthest send its weight Stat? 2. Give me to send the laughing bowl around, Prop? 7. and send again to War; Prop? 82. already 'gan the Dawn to send: Dante 26. Sends. His Brother sends him to the tomb. Odin 56. Seneca. Seneca be there In gorgeous phrase Agr. 148. Sense. No sense have they of ills to come, Eton 53. steep in slumbers each benighted sense? Ign. 18. With Sense to feel, E. G. 30. Senseless. Stung by a senseless word, Agr. 134. Sent, nor on what Errand Sent hither: Dante 11. Sentry. Such as ... at the chappel-door stand sentry; L. S. 104. Sequestered. the cool sequester'd vale of life El. 75. Seraph-wings. Upon the seraph-wings of Extasy, P. P. 96. Serene 117 Shapeless Serene, many a gem of purest ray serene, El. 53. The star of Brunswick smiles serene, Inst. 93. skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song 9. Serpent-train. Nor . . . Let painted Flatt'ry hide her serpent- train Inst. 8. Servant's. Forgive your servant's fears, Agr. 24. Serve. a call, Like mine, might serve ... to wake Agr. 103. Servile. Even in the servile senate, Agr. 123. With servile simper nod the mitred head. Toph. 4. Servitude. Servitude that hugs her chain, Inst. 6. Sesostris. Like old Sesostris with barbaric pride; Ign. 37. Set. See also Sharp-set. Thy sun is set, Spring 49. Ere the ruddy sun be set, F. S. 21. Setting. With whistful eyes pursue the setting sun. El. Mas. 120. Seven. Whence the seven Sisters' congregated fires, Prop. 2 35. Sevenfold. To mourn the Glories of his sevenfold Stream, Prop. 3 50. Sever. j-Then to sever what is bound, Rond. 31. Severe. With Justice to herself severe, Adv. 31. Truth severe, by fairy Fiction drest. Bar d 127. Severest. laughing wild Amid severest woe. Eton 80. Severn. Severn shall re-eccho with affright Bard 54. Sexe's. See Sex's. Sex's. Condemns her fickle Sexe's fond Mistake, Prop? 73. Shade. branches stretch A broader, browner shade; Spring 12. Science still adores Her Henry's holy Shade; Eton 4. whose shade . . . Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 8. ah, plrasing shade, Eton 11. beneath the od'rous shade P. P. 58. Ev'ry shade and hallow'd Fountain P. P. 75. Boar . . . Wallows beneath the thorny shade. Bard 94. Benrath . . . that yew-tree's shade, El. 13. this long deserted shade. El. Mas. 112. that empty shade Of long-forgotten liberty: Agr. 43. take me to thy peaceful shade again. Ign. 6. Shades. your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. The Soil . . . Forbids . . . her Shades to rise, E. G. 7. Or deepest shades . . . Gilds with a gleam Vic. 36. Shadow. On her shadow . . . Lochlin plows Owen 13. Shadowy. Hurls o'er their shadowy rear, P. P. MS. 52. The triple dog that scares the shadowy kind, Prop? 44. Shafts. glitt'ring shafts of war. P. P. 53 ; MS. 52. Shafts for shuttles, dipt in gore, F. S. 13. Shaggy. shaggy forms o'er ice-built mountains roam, P. P. 55. down the steep of Snowdon's shaggy side Bar d 11. His shaggy throat he open'd wide, Odin 6. Shake. haughty hearts, unus'd to shake Agr. 17. A tempest that shall shake her own creation Agr. 91. shake 'em at the name of liberty, Agr. 133. Shakes. The groaning earth beneath him shakes [quakes, MS.], Odin 14. Shakes all his Pines, Prop? 32. Shakespeare. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. Shakespeare's. burns in Shakespeare's . . . page, Bent. 19. Shall, omitted. Shalt, omitted. Shambles. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — C. C. 9. Shame. And Shame that sculks behind; Eton 64. Glory pursue, and generous Shame, P. P. 64. Ye Towers of Julius, London's lasting shame, Bard 87. Marking . . . shame to fly, Owen 36. quench the blushes of ingenuous shame, El. 70. Shame of the versifying tribe! L. S. 18. walls that seem to mock my shame, Agr. 156. But his nose is a shame, C. C. 8. These conscious shame withheld, Stat. 1 25. Shape. Fame, in the shape of Mr. Purt, L. S. 41. If the thin Coan Web her Shape reveal, Prop? 9. Shapeless. uncouth rhimes and shapeless sculpture El. 79. Shapes 118 Should Shapes. |P, Proteus-like ... all shapes can shew, Ch. Cr. 43. Share. he yet may share the feast: Bard-j<). Where our Friends the conflict share, F. S. 27. climb his knees the envied kiss to share. El. 24. Sharp-set. The hungry Pack their sharp-set Fangs em- brued. Dante 40. She, omitted. Shed. The tear forgot as soon as shed, Eton 43. from the straw-built shed, El. 18. bid it . . . shed The fragrance of its blushing head: Inst. 73. lamps, that shed at Ev'n a cheerful ray E. G. 66. She'd. See also Would. She 'd issue out her high commission. L. S. 51. Sheep-biting. Such a sheep-biting look, C. C. 6. Sheet. See Winding-sheet. Shelburne's. Nor Shelburne's, Rigby's, Calcraft's friendship vain, View MS. 18. Shell. Sovereign of the willing soul, . . . Enchanting shell! P. P. 15. *T was Milton struck the deep-ton'd shell, Inst. 23. fthe rolling Sun Bursts the inactive Shell, Ode 44. Shepherd. The Shepherd of his flocks, Prop. 3 60. She-wolf. She-Wolf of France, . . . That tear'st Bard 57. Shew. See Show. Shews. See Shows. Shield. spread O'er the youthful King your shield. F. S. 32. O'er it hangs the shield of gold; Odin 45. Gwyneth's shield, Owen 4. So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat. 1 28. Shine. There sit . . . The few, whom genius gave to shine Inst. 16. In vain to me the smileing Mornings shine, West 1. Sulphureous veins and liveing silver shine, Tasso 59. Shines. When blazing 'gainst the sun it shines from far, Stat. 1 30. From Cynthia all that in my numbers shines; Prop. 3 3. Shining. A shining border round the margin roll'd, Stat. 7 26. Swift shoots the Village-maid . . . adown the shining way, Tasso 20. Shipwrecked. And mariners, though shipwreck'd, dread to land, View 8. Shiver. Pikes must shiver, javelins sing, F. S. 22. Shivered. thunder's fiery stroke, Glancing on the shiver'd oak; Conan 8. Shivering. To chear the shiv'ring [buried, MS.] Natives dull abode. P. P. 57. Shoe-strings. His bushy beard, and shoe-strings green, L. S. 13. Shook. A sudden fit of ague shook him, L. S. 119. Shoot. Shafts . . . Shoot the trembling cords along. F. S. 14. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. Shoots. Swift shoots the Village-maid in rustic play Tasso 19. fOr Poppy-thoughts blast all the shoots. Ode 12. Shore. On dreary Arvon's shore they lie, Bard 35. Talymalfra's rocky shore Owen 25. Nor fear the rocks, nor seek the shore: Inst. 92. oft on Alpheus' shore The pond'rous brass . . . he bore; Stat. 1 36. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. scepter'd Alexandria's captive Shore, Prop? 45. Short. The short and simple annals of the poor. El. 32. Short was his joy. L. S. -j-j. To start from short slumbers, and wish for the morning — Am. Lines 3. And the short Marble but preserve a Name, Prop? 100. Short-lived. Obscure bis radiance in a short-liv'd night; Prop? 34. Should. why should they know their fate ? Eton 95. Owls should have hooted View Nich. 23. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop? 10. No Mountain-Structures in my Verse should rise, Prop? 36. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Ilium there should be, Prop? 37. Here should Augustus great in Arms appear, Prop? 41. In golden Chains should loaded Monarchs bend, Prop? 48. Thee too the Muse should consecrate to Fame, Prop? 53. Each in his proper Art should waste the Day: Prop? 62. j-But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Shout 119 Sign Shout. Rous'd by the shout of millions: Agr. 143. Show. Some shew their gayly-gilded trim Spring 29. shew them where in ambush stand Eton 58. Her air and all her manners shew it. L. S. 138. fin Episode, to show my breeding: Ode 28. fP, Proteus-like ... all shapes can shew, Ch. Cr. 43. Showed. Shew'd him where empire tower'd, Agr. 46. Shower. Iron-sleet of arrowy shower Hurtles F. 5. 3. Sweet is the breath of vernal shower, Inst. 61. Showers. scatter'd oft . . . are Show'rs of Violets £/. Pem. 118 ; Mas. 138. scatter . . . Showers of Plenty o'er the Land. E. G. 18. And batter Cadmus' walls with stony showers, Stat. 1 18. Shows. court the times With shows of fair obeisance; Agr. 102. So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat. 1 28. ■f-and now shews a Pound; Ch. Cr. 38. Shrieks. Severn shall re-eccho . . . The shrieks of death, Bard 55. Shrieks of an agonizing King! Bard 56. Shrill. The cock's shrill clarion, El. 19. Or chaunticleer so shrill, El. Mas. 19. when thou hear'st the organ piping shrill Shaft. 15. Shriller. ■(■In shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. Shrine. heap the shrine of Luxury and Pride EI. 71. Before the Goddess' shrine we . . . bend, Prop. 1 2. Shrink. the time To shrink from danger; Agr. 48. Shun, f and Thoughts Like Butterflies, their Prison shun Ode 45. Shut. shut the gates of mercy on mankind, El. 68. Shuttles. Shafts for shuttles, dipt in gore, F. S. 13. Sicily. And there the ensanguined Wave of Sicily, Prop? 44. Sickening. Must sick'ning virtue fly the tainted ground? E.G. 71. Sickle. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield, El. 25. Sickles. Oft did the harvest to their sickles yield, El. Eg. 25. Sickly. Night, and all her sickly dews, P. P. 49. oft in weak and sickly minds Agr. 72. sickly Plants betray a niggard Earth, E. G. 1. The uncertain Crescent gleams a sickly light. Tasso 48. Side. 'T was on a lofty vase's side, Cat 1. down the steep of Snowdon's shaggy side Bard 11. Side by side as proudly riding, Owen 12. the Greenwood Side along, El. Mas. 117. With Freedom by my side, Inst. 34. Indolence and Pride, Softly rolling, side by side, Vic. 62. Sidelong. With side-long plough to quell the . . . ground, £. G. 91. Sidney. The Master of Sidney Is of the same Kidney; Satire 9. Sieges. •(■Battles, Sieges, Men, and Arms, Ode 25. Sigh. shall [shalt, Lett. 1 ] send A sigh, Bard MS. 76. the passing tribute of a sigh. El. 80. A sigh of soft reflection. Bent. 28. A sigh; an unavailing tear; Gierke 14. Sighing. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, View 17. Sighs. each giant-oak, and desert cave, Sighs Bard 24. languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E. G. 45. Sighs sudden and frequent, Am. Lines 5. For thee fat Nanny sighs, Com. Lines 6. Sight. Visions of glory, spare my aching sight, Bar d 107. fades the glimmering landscape on the sight. El. 5. Styack has often seen the sight L. S. 103. not the basilisk More deadly to the sight, Agr. 161. the dazzled sight Of wakeful jealousy. Agr. 191. gems that singly charm the sight, Bent. 22. lessening from the dazzled sight, Melts into air Vic. 15. Our mother-church, with half-averted sight, Blush'd Toph. 5. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Slat. 1 22. The diamond there attracts the wondrous sight, Tasso 69. To Chiron Phoenix owed his long-lost Sight, Prop? 83. Speechless my Sight I fix'd, nor wept, Dante 53. Sigismundo. Lanfranc there And Sigismundo, Dante 33. Sign. no sign of grace, L. S. 89. 'T is a sign you have cat just enough Couplet 2. Silence 120 Sisters Silence. Such as in silence of the night Come L. S. 101. Silent: Melancholy, silent maid, Adv. 27. Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust, El. 43. the silent Tenour of thy Doom. El. Mas. 88. I . . . must be silent, Agr. 85. In silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Bent. I. Lo! where the silent marble weeps, . . . a mother sleeps: Clerke I. Silken. The silken son of dalliance, Agr. 98. Silks. But rustling in their silks and tissues. L. S. 24, Silk-worm. ■j-For one Silk-worm thought that thrives Ode 37. Silly. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. Silver. Their jewels of silver and jewels of gold? C. C. 26. Sulphureous veins and liveing silver shine, Tasso 59. With silver light Relumes her crescent Orb Prop-. 2 21. fslow down the Silver stream. Ch. Cr. 57. Silver-bright. Oft woo'd the gleam of Cynthia silver-bright Inst. 32. Silver-winding. Wanders the . . . Thames along His silver- winding way: Eton 10. Similes. ■(■Tares of Similes choak the roots, Ode n. Simper. With servile simper nod the mitred head. To ph. 4. Simple. The short and simple annals of the poor. El. 32. Simplest. The simplest note that swells the gale, Vie. 50. Since. Since sorrow never comes too late, Eton 96, Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 27. Since weeping I forsook thy fond embrace. Ign. 12. since Of me the Tower of Famine hight Dante 23. Sincere. his soul sincere, EL 121. Affection warm, and faith sincere, Clerke 5. Sinew. every labouring sinew strains, Eton 86. Brac'd all his nerves, and every sinew strung; Stat. 2 7. Sinews. The slacken'd sinews of time-wearied age. Agr. 140. where unwearied sinews must be found E. G. 90. Sing. Pikes must shiver, javelins sing, F. S. 22. Songs of joy and triumph sing! F. S. 54. they sing, they laugh, they tattle, L. S. 58. Lubbers, That to eternity would sing, L. S. 143. And I, . . . That live to . . . sing their fall. Hoel 24. No tree is heard to whisper, bird to sing; View 10. And sing with what a careless Grace she flings Prop. 3 15. fbuskin'd Strains, ... I sing; Ode^. Singly. gems that singly charm the sight, Bent. 22. Sings. Bright Rapture calls, and soaring, as she sings, Bard 123. through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 50. Sink. They sink, they vanish from my eyes. Bard MS. 104. crush his pride, And sink the traitor Agr. 187. How flames . . . Shall sink this beauteous fabric Prop. 2 28. Sinking. If sinking into Sleep she seem to close Prop. 3 17. Sinks. Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 94. The ponderous mass sinks in the cleaving ground, Stat. 2 16. Sinner. The ghostly Prudes . . . Already had con- demned the sinner. L. S. 130. Sir. far less shall be Our Suffering, Sir, Dante 66. Sire. thy Sire to send on earth Virtue . . . design'd, Adv. 9. those of Egypt, Have not forgot your sire: Agr. 116. the panting Sire Of Strength bereft, Dante 37. Sire's. No children run to lisp their sire's return, El. 23. Sister, long rever'd ... the daughter, sister, wife, Agr. 118. "Lord! sister," says Physic to Law, C. C. 5. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat. 1 54. Sister-art. Bentley leads her sister-art along, Bent. 3. Sisters. Sisters, weave the web of death; F. S. 51. Sisters, cease, the work is done. F. S. 52. Sisters, hence with spurs of speed: F. S. 61. Her sisters denying, and Jemmy proposing: C. C. 20. where three sisters of old In harmless society guttle C. C. 3. Sisters' 121 Slumber Sisters'. Whence the seven Sisters' congregated fires, Prop? 35. Sit. With me the Muse shall sit, Spring 16. a griesly band, I see them sit, Bar d 45. There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. benefits ... sit heavy on the soul, Agr. 75. Let majesty sit on thy awful brow, Agr. 145. Stfs. 1 Her infant image . . . Sits smiling on a father's woe: Clerke 10. Sitting. Brown sees thee sitting on his nose's tip, Com. Lines 4. Six. Not I — for a coronet, chariot and six. C. C. 18. Sixth. e'er the sixth Morn Had dawn'd, Dante 74. Skies. bright track, that fires the western skies, Bard 103. they speak . . . The liquid language of the skies: Inst. 56. trusts her Blossoms to the churlish Skies. E. G. 8. A brighter Day, and Skies of azure Hue; E. G. 55. opener skies, and suns of fiercer flame E. G. 64. The common sun, the air, the skies, Vic. 51. skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song 9. through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 49. No Giant Race, no Tumult of the Skies, Prop. 3 35. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop. 3 47. Nor changing Skies can hurt, Prop. 3 94. Skill. No boding Maid of skill divine Art thou, din 84. Skim. Some lightly o'er the current skim, Spring 28. Skirts. solemn scenes . . . their glitt'ring skirts unroll? Bard 106. Skulks. And Shame that sculks behind; Eton 64. Skurry. See Hurry-skurry. Sky. Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. He gives to range the dreary sky: P. P. 51. the native darkness of the sky; Ign. 8. Sky-lark. But chief, the sky-lark warbles high Vic. 13. Slackened. rebrace The slacken'd sinews of . . . age. Agr. 140. Anon, with slacken'd rage comes quiv'ring down, Stat. 1 51. Thy passing Courser's slacken'd Speed restrain; Prop. 3 102. Slain. that I was ... by Treachery slain, Dante 17. Slaughter. We the reins to slaughter [havock, Pern.] give, F. S. 33. to wade through slaughter to a throne, El. 67. Slaves. Slaves from the womb, Agr. 130. Sleep. See also Iron-sleep. They do not sleep. Bard 43. Where long of yore to sleep was laid Odin 19. Let me, let me sleep again. Odin 34. The rude Forefathers of the hamlet sleep. El. 16. For ever sleep: El. Mas. 17. Now let him sleep in peace Child 6. If sinking into Sleep she seem to close Prop. 3 17. and Sleep Prophetic of my Woes Dante 26. sleep as yet Gave not to know Dante 42. Sad with the Fears of sleep, Dante 49. Sleeping. The sleeping fragrance from the ground; Vic. 6. Sleeps. Brave Urien sleeps upon his craggy bed: Bard^i. A friend, a wife, a mother sleeps: Clerke 2. Sleet. See Iron-sleet. Sleeve. safe and laughing in his sleeve, L. S. 75. Slippery. The slipp'ry verge her feet beguil'd, Cat 29. A slipp'ry weight, Stat. 1 8. Sloth. dreaming Sloth of pallid hue, Inst. 4. Slow. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach declare: P. P. 36. Descending slow their glitt'ring skirts unroll? Bard 106. Slow thro' the church-way path El. 114. pacing forth With solemn steps and slow, Inst. 36. Come on, With sturdy step and slow, Hippome- don; Stat. 2 2. Heal the slow Chief, and send again Prop. 3 82. •f-Slow follow all the quality of State, Ch. Cr. 51. fslow down the Silver stream. Ch. Cr. 57. Slow-consuming. Poverty . . . And slow-consuming Age. Eton 90. Slowly. Slowly breath'd a sullen sound. Odin 26. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. Slowly-winding. rushy Camus' slowly-winding flood Ign. 3. Sluggish. ■f-And, springing from the sluggish mould, Ode 47. Slumber. Quench'd in dark clouds of slumber lie P. P. 23. That Slumber brings to aid my Poetry. Prop. 3 20. Slumbering 122 So Slumbering. The massy sceptre o'er thy slumb'ring line ? Ign. 1 6. She bids each slumb'ring energy awake, E. G. 78. the whilst I slumb'ring lay, Dante 26. Slumbers. the slumbers light, Eton 49. steep in slumbers each benighted sense? Ign. 18. To start from short slumbers, and wish for the morning — Am. Lines 3. Sly. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, Small. In still small Accents whisp'ring The Muses, . . . Convey'd him . closet The still small voice of gratitude. C.C.i. El. Mas. 83. . To a small L. S. 72. Inst. 64. From fumbling baronets and poets small, Shak. 6. and to small distance threw. Stat. 1 6. Thro' a small crevice opening, Dante 22. ■(•And seems small difference the sounds between; Ch. Cr. 46. Smeared. Smear'd with gore, and ghastly pale: Bard^d. Smile. A baleful smile upon their baffled Guest. Bard. 82. A smile of horror on their baffled guest. Bard MS. 82. Till he on Hoder^s corse shall smile Odin 69. Nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile El. 31. If equal Justice . . . Smile not indulgent E. G. 16. The social Smile, the sympathetic Tear. E. G. 37. They smile, but reply not — Am. Lines 8. Smiled. Malignant Fate . . . smil'd Cat 28. Stretch'd forth his little arms, and smiled. P. P. 88. She smiled, and bid him come to dinner. L. S. 132. Smileing. See Smiling. Smiles. The star of Brunswick smiles serene, Inst. 93. nor to be lured with smiles Agr. 18. Dispel . . . with smiles, the tim'rous cloud Agr. 193. Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. Smiles on past Misfortune's brow . . . Reflec- tion's hand can trace; Vic. 29. hag . . . smiles malignant on the labouring power. Stat. 1 59. Here the soft emerald smiles Tasso 67. Smiling. scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, El. 63. now smiling as in scorn, El. 105. In vain to me the smileing Mornings shine, West 1. Her infant image . . . Sits smiling on a father's woe: Clerke 10. Smoking. As when from Etna's smoking summit broke, Stat. 2 18. Smooth. Deep, majestic, smooth, and strong. P. P. 8. Swift shoots the Village-maid . . . Smooth, with- out step, Tasso 20. Smugged. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. 1. Smuggle. resolution To smuggle a few years, View 3. Snatch. And snatch a fearful joy. Eton 40. Snow. the rose of snow, ... we spread: Bardyi. The winter's snow, the summer's heat, Odin 32. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop. 2 14. fMy cold soil nips the Buds with Snow. Ode 6. Snowdon's. down the steep of Snowdon's shaggy side Bard 11. what solemn scenes on Snowdon's height Bard 105. Snows. the rigour Of bleak Germania's snows. Agr. no. dauntless goes . . . through Zembla's snows? E. G. 77. A vestment unadorn'd, though white as new- fal'n Snows; Tasso 14. Snowy. the snowy beard, Cat 8. snowy veils, that float in air. Odin 78. Saw the snowy whirlwind fly; Vic. 22. So. beech, That wreathes its . . . roots so high, El. 102. Or chaunticleer so shrill, El. Mas. 19. So Rumor says. L. S. 73. So cunning was the Apparatus, L. S. 85. The powerful pothooks did so move him, L. S. 86. And so God save our noble King, L. S. 141. Where he so soon may — Agr. 165. no matter What; so 't be strange, Agr. 171. So Helen look'd, Agr. 194. So her white neck reclin'd, so was she borne Agr. 195. So draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. So fond Instruction on the growing Powers E. G. 13. How rude so e'er th' exterior Form E. G. 26. so was thought somewhat odd; Char. 3. So Caradoc bore his lance. Caradoc 4. — and his eyes are so lewd! C. C. 8. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — C. C. 9. He drinks — so did Noah; C. C. 28. — he swears — so do I: C. C. 28. So York shall taste Shak. 21. So from our works sublimer fumes shall rise; Shak. 22. Soar 123 Some So the Master of Queen's Is as like as two beans Satire 15 so grinned the brawling fiend, Toph. 1 So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat. 1 28 So from th' astonish'd stars, Stat. 1 53 So mov'd the Seer, Tasso 23 Why does yon Orb, so exquisitely bright, Prop? 33 Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly? Dante 56 jl tell her so in Elegy. Ode 30 fSo I to you this Trifle give, Ode 53 f As H the Hebrew found, so I the Jew, Ch. Cr. 25 fSo big with Weddings, waddles W, Ch. Cr. 58 Soar. On expectation's strongest wing to soar Agr. 42. Soaring. Bright Rapture calls, and soaring, . . . Waves Bard 123. Sober. To Contemplation's sober eye Spring 31. Their sober wishes never learn 'd to stray; El. 74. Social. buried ashes glow with social fires. El. Mas. 108. The social Smile, the sympathetic Tear. E. G. 37. Society. In harmless society guttle and scold. C. C. 4. Soft. Pity, dropping soft the sadly-pleasing tear. Adv. 32. frantic Passions hear thy soft controul. P. P. 16. Vocal no more, . . . To . . . soft Llewellyn's lay, Bard 28. soft the Zephyr blows, Bard 71. And thus they speak in soft accord Inst. 55. Knows his soft ear the trumpet's . . . voice, Agr. 95. But, soft! why do I waste the . . . hours Agr. 154. the soft springs of pity in my heart, Agr. 182. ignorance! soft salutary power! Ign. 9. The soft Returns of Gratitude E. G. 34. A sigh of soft reflection. Bent. 28. With . . . whisper soft She woo s the tardy 6pring: Fie. 3. Smiles . . . Soft Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 30. faith sincere, And soft humanity were there. Clerke 6. Here the soft emerald smiles Tasso 67. These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop. 2 51. Whence the soft Strain and ever-melting Verse? Prop. 3 2. That the soft Subject of my Song I make, Prop. 3 14. Me from myself the soft Enchantress stole; Prop. 3 75. Soften. To soften, not to wound my heart. Adv. 44. Softer. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop. 1 3. Soft-eyed. Freedom by my side, and soft-eyed Melancholy. Inst. 34. Softly. Indolence and Pride, Softly rolling, side by side, Vic. 62. Soil. The Soil, . . . will not teem in vain, E. G. 6. manners speak the idiom of their soil. E. G. 87. To seek your Hero in a distant Soil! Tasso 28. f My cold soil nips the Buds with Snow. Ode 6. Solar. In climes beyond the solar road, P. P. 54. Soldier. the Soldier of the Fight, Prop. 3 60. Soldier's. Weaving many a Soldier's doom, F. S. 7. strengthen it With his plain soldier's oath, Agr. 151. Sole. Verse, the hero's sole reward. Conan 4. Solemn. Still on thy solemn steps attend: Adv. 29. Murmur'd deep a solemn sound: P. P. 76. what solemn [. . . jLett. 1 ] scenes on Snowdon's height Bard 105. Virgins . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 76. all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. 6. When he the solemn hall had seen; L. S. 118. pacing forth With solemn steps and slow, Inst. 36. mutter'd charms, and solemn invocation, Agr. 63. Solemn-breathing. Parent of sweet and solemn-breathing airs, P. P. 14. Solid. and cleaves the solid ground. Stat. 1 52. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop. 2 30. Solitary. A solitary fly! Spring 44. Molest her ancient solitary reign. El. 12. Solitude. Amazement in his van, . . . and solitude behind. Bar d 62. Solomon. Why, David lov'd catches, and Solomon whoring: C. C. 24. Some. Beside some water's rushy brink Spring 15. Some lightly o'er the current skim, Spring 28. Some shew their gayly-gilded trim Spring 29. Some speedy aid to send. Cat 33. While some on earnest business bent Eton 31. Some bold adventurers disdain Eton 35. Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire; El. 46. Some village-Hampden, El. ^7. Some mute inglorious Milton El. 59. Something 124 Soul Some Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood. El. 60. Some frail memorial . . . erected nigh, El. 78. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. Some pious drops the closing eye requires; El. 90. If chance that e'er some pensive spirit El. Mas. 95. Some kindred spirit shall inquire El. 96. some hoary-headed Swain may say, El. 97. Such as . . . Come (sweep) along some wind- ing entry L. S. 102. haply eyed at distance Some edileship, Agr. 40. To smuggle some years, View MS. 3. if to some feeling breast Bent. 25. ■{■Some spin away their little lives Ode 39. ■(■Some have loved, and loved (they say) Rond. 5. ■j-Some have lov'd, to pass the time, Rond. 13. Something. Yet something he was heard to mutter, L. S. 121. Somewhat. Teach it ... as somewhat rare Agr. 135. so was thought somewhat odd; Char. 3. Son. See also Dragon-son. Thy son is gone. Bard (A. he that calls, a Warriour's Son. Odin 38. Welcome, my noble son, Inst. 67. the fate Impending o'er your son: Agr. 66. If the son reign, the mother perishes. Agr. 67. reign the son! Agr. 68. The silken son of dalliance, Agr. 98. had her wanton son Lent us his wings, Agr. 189. my Hoel, died, Great Cian's son: Hoel 7. Nor more, for now Nesimachus's son, Stat. 1 13. And Phoebus' Son recall'd Androgeon Prop? 84. Song. Learn the tenour of our song. F. S. 58. The fond complaint, my Song, disprove, P. P. 46. Modred, whose magic song Made huge Plinlim- mon bow Bard^. Owen's praise demands my song, Owen 1. the Woodlark piped her farewell Song, El. Mas. 119. nature . . . leads the general song: Vic. 20. That the soft Subject of my Song I make, Prop? 14. •j-Loath'd the love; and loath'd the song; Rond. 15. Songs. Songs of joy and triumph sing! F. S. 54. •(-gratefully they pay Their little Songs, Ode 52. Song-thrush. the song-thrush there Scatters his loose notes Birds 1. Sonnet. He once or twice had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 125. ■(•Perhaps Thalia prompts a Sonnet Ode 35. Sons. Pain can reach the Sons of Heav'n! Odin 48. His sable Sons with nearer Course surrounds E. G. 24. when I beheld My Sons, Dante 62. Soon. The tear forgot as soon as shed, Eton 43. Soon their ample sway shall stretch F. S. 39. Soon a King shall bite the ground. F. S. 44. But soon his rhetorick forsook him, L. S. 117. Where he so soon may — Agr. 165. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. his helpless offspring soon O'erta'en beheld, Dante 38. too soon they had aroused 'em Dante 48. f Or, soon as they begin to blow Ode 5. ■(•but soon pops in again; Ch. Cr. 30. Sooth. See Soothe. Soothe. My weary soul they seem to sooth Eton 18. Can . . . Flatt'ry soothe the . . . ear of death? El. 44. Soranus. Soranus there, And Cassius; Agr. 124. Sorceries. Sorceries, Assassinations, poisonings — Agr. 171. Sore. By residence, by marriage, and sore eyes? Shak. 12. Sorrow. sorrow never comes too late, Eton 96. What sorrow was, thou bad'st her know, Adv. 15. Long her strains in sorrow steep: F. S. 47. o'er the cheek of Sorrow throw Vic. 31. A pang, to secret sorrow dear; Clerke 13. My struggling sorrow, Dante 69. what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante 81. Sorrow's. Sorrow's piercing dart. Eton 70. and Sorrow's weeping train, P. P. 44. with Flight combined, And sorrow's faded form, Bard 62. Sorrows. Struck the deep sorrows of his lyre. Bard 22. Tell me, whence their sorrows rose: Odin 79. Sought. They sought, oh Albion! next thy sea-encircled coast. P. P. 82. Soul. My weary soul they seem to sooth, Eton 18. numbs the soul with icy hand, Eton 89. Sovereign of the willing soul, P. P. 13. To save thy secret soul from nightly fears, Bard 7. unborn Ages, crowd not on my soul ! Bard 108. They breathe a soul to animate thy clay. Bard 1 22. the genial current of the soul. El. 52. On some fond breast the parting soul relies, El. 89. Large was his bounty, and his soul [heart, Mas.] sincere, El. 121. where on their opening soul First . . . ardour stole. I»st- M« I . . . Have seen your soul, Agr. 55. Souls 125 Spell benefits ... sit heavy on the soul, Agr. 75. Health and Vigour to the Soul impart, E. G. II. What fancied Zone can circumscribe the soul, E. G. 73. Rise, my soul! on wings of fire, Vic. 17. My soul in Bacchus' pleasing fetters bound; Prop? 8. j-Nature in my Soul implanted: Ode 2. Souls. rough, stubborn souls That struggle with the yoke. Agr. 126. To different Climes seem different Souls assign'd ? E. G. 39. Sound. Murmur'd deep a solemn sound: P. P. 76. Slowly breath'd a sullen sound. Odin 26. But hark! the portals sound, Inst. 35. Scar'd at the sound, Agr. 32. say we sound The trump of liberty; Agr. 121. to sound the Victor's Praise, Prop? 32. Sounding. the nations . . . Their cymbals toss, and sound- ing brass explore; Stat. 1 57. Her artful hand across the sounding Strings. Prop. 3 16. Sounds. Such were the sounds, that . . . scatter'd wild dismay, Bard 9. Or roused by sprightly sounds from out the trance, Prop. 2 5. But yet in low and uncompleated Sounds Dante 44. ■fAnd seems small difference the sounds between; Ch. Cr. 46. Sour. Sour visages, enough to scare ye, L. S. 106. Source. the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94. conscious of the source from whence E. G. 74. Near the source whence Pleasure flows; Vic. 54. Of many a flood they view'd the secret source, Tasso 51. Back to it's Source divine the Julian Race. Prop. 3 58. South. The prostrate South to the Destroyer yields E. G. 52. Sovereign. Sovereign of the willing soul, P. P. 13. Why then stays my sovereign, Agr. 164. Spacious. within the spatious walls, L. S. 9. This spacious animated Scene survey E. G. 22. As bright and huge the spacious circle lay, Stat} 26. And in the midst a spacious arch appears. Tasso 42. Spaniard. Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it. L. S. 16. Spaniel. Follows them like a spaniel : Satire 26. Spare. spare the meek Usurper's holy head. Bar d 90. Visions of glory, spare my aching sight, Bard 107. Ours to kill, and ours to spare: F. S. 34. Spare the honour of my love. Song 12. Spares. •(•careless spares to weed the Plain; Ode 10. Spark. The gen'rous spark extinct revive, Adv. 45. How shall the spark . . . Blaze Agr. 127. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. Sparkling. Fill high the sparkling bowl, Bard 77. Sparks. The Sparks of Truth and Happiness E. G. 29. Spatious. See Spacious. Speak. Speak to a Commoner and Poet! L. S. 140. And thus they speak in soft accord Inst. 55. The manners speak the idiom of their soil. E. G. 87. and skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song 10. Speaks. •j-K, as a man, with hoarser accent speaks, Ch. Cr. 47. Spear. With dazzling helm, and horrent spear. Bard MS. 112. Where he points his purple spear, Owen 33. Spectres. Her Spectres wan, and Birds of boding cry, P. P. 50. Sped. Collecting all his force, the circle sped; Stat. 1 48. Speechless. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. What Virgins these, in speechless woe, Odin 75. Speechless my Sight I fix'd, nor wept, Dante 53. Speed. To chase the rolling circle's speed, Eton 29. Sisters, hence with spurs of speed: F. S. 61. Uprose the King of Men with speed, Odin 1. beguil'd With more elusive speed the . . . sight Agr. 191. Art it requires and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. Thy passing Courser's slacken'd Speed restrain; Prop. 3 102. with fleet and equal Speed Dante 31. Speedy. Some speedy aid to send. Cat 33. Spell. The Father of the powerful spell. Odin 12. Prophetess, my spell obey, Odin 59. But left a spell upon the table. L. S. 80. Without a spell to raise, ... it Agr- 16. Spelt 126 Squadrons Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop? 15. The powerful Mixture and the midnight Spell; Prop? 86. Spelt. their years, spelt by th' unletter'd muse, EL Si. Sphere. The sun's pale sister, . . . Deserts precipitant her darken'd sphere: Stat. 1 55. Spice. Better be twisted into caps for spice, Skak. 19. Spied. Him the Dog of Darkness spied, Odin 5. You think, you spied a tear Agr. 10. Spilt. By whom shall Hoder^s blood be spilt? Odin 62. Spin. ■j-Some spin away their little lives Ode 39. Spinning. Your Hist'ry whither are you spinning? L. S. 19. Spires. Ye distant spires, . . . That crown the . . . glade, Eton 1. Spirit. See also Sprite. Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. what daring Spirit Wakes thee P. P. 112. Some kindred spirit shall inquire El. 96. If chance that e'er some pensive spirit El. Mas. 109. kind Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, L. S. 30. the spirit of Britannicus -Ag r - H- They guard with spirit what . . . they gain'd? -E.G. 95. fBids the poetick Spirit flourish; Ode 14. Spirits. The spirits pure, Eton 49. While spirits blest above . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 87. Spirit-stirring. ears to own Her spirit-stirring voice; Agr. 124. Spite. Spite of danger he shall live. F. S. 3 $. Spite of her frail companion dauntless goes E. G. 76. Much have I borne from canker 'd critic's spite, Shak. 5. Spoils. page Rich with the spoils of time El. 50. Spoke. He spoke, and headlong . . . plung'd Bard 143. Sport. With antic Sport[ ?], P. P. MS. 30. Sported. A gentler Lamb ne'er sported on the plain, Child 3. Sportive. The sportive kind reply: Spring 42, Sports. With antic Sports, and blue-eyed Pleasures, P. P. 30. oft in Pisa's sports, his native land Admired that arm, Stat. 1 35. And sports and wantons o'er the frozen tide. Tasso 22. Spot. in this neglected spot is laid El. 45. On this congenial spot he fix'd his choice; View 5. Spots. With native spots and artful labour gay, Stat? 25. Spray. •jthen perches on the spray, Ch. Cr. 41. Spread. Gondula, and Geira, spread . . . your shield. P.S.31. the rose of snow, ... we spread: Bard 92. For whom yon glitt'ring board is spread, Odin 41. giddy fame Has spread among the crowd; Agr. 168. Spread the young Thought, E. G. 12. climes, that spread Where Nile redundant E. G. 100. Sprightly. Full many a sprightly race Eton 22. Or roused by sprightly sounds from out the trance, Prop? 5. Spring. The untaught harmony of spring: Spring 7. Eager to taste the honied spring, Spring 26. thy spring is gone — Spring 49. To breathe a second spring. Eton 20. She woo's the tardy spring: Vic. 4. Ere the spring he would return — Song 2. Springing. •f-And, springing from the sluggish mould, Ode 47. Springs. From Helicon's harmonious springs P. P. 3. the soft springs of pity in my heart, Agr. 182. the source from whence she springs, E. G. 74. Sprite. See aho Spirit. Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite, Odin 29. Sprung. 'T was the Lark that upward sprung! Song 5. Spun. The thread is spun. BardyS. Spurs. Sisters, hence with spurs of speed: F. S. 61. Sputter. For thee does Powell squeeze, and Marriot sputter, Com. Lines 2. Spy. Hyperion's march they spy, P. P. 53. The secrets of th' Abyss to spy. P. P. 97. Squadrons. thro' the kindred squadrons mow their way. BardS6. Squadrons three against him came; Owen 10. Upon Deira's squadrons hurl'd Hoel 3. Square 127 Step Sauare. Cried the square Hoods in woful fidget L. S. 135. Squeaks, ■fin shriller notes Q like a female squeaks; Ch. Cr. 48. Squeeze. For thee does Powell squeeze, Com. Lines 2. Squib. Disprov'd the arguments of Squib, L. S. 115. Squire. But left . . . state to Charles Townshend and Squire. Char. 6. St. See also Saint. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shak. 2. The Master of St. John's Satire 33. Owls would have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. And foxes stunk and litter'd in St. Paul's. View 24. Stain. Nor Envy . . . Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 10. Stairs. And up stairs in a whirlwind rattle. L. S. 60. Stamp. Stamp we our vengeance deep, Bard 96. Stand. shew them where in ambush stand Eton 58. And from the gallery stand peeping: L. S. 100. Such as ... at the chappel-door stand sentry; L. S. 104. you spied a tear stand in her eye, Agr. 10. Let him stand forth Stat. 1 3. Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand; Stat. 1 38. Irresolute they stand; Tasso 11. Stands. The Dragon-Son of Mona stands; Owen 20. An ancient pile of buildings stands: L. S. 2. Star. See also Evening-star. The star of Brunswick smiles serene, Inst. 93. the influence of the northern star E. G. 68. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop. 2 19. Stare. The Audience stare, L. S. 109. created but to stare, Agr. 130. Starry. Sublime their starry fronts they rear; Bard 112. Stars. So from the astonish'd stars, Stat. 1 53. Start. the idle herd ... yet will start, Agr. 131. To start from short slumbers, and wish for the morning — Am. Lines 3. Starts. Till April starts, and calls around Vic. 5. Starves, flinty Bosom starves her generous Birth, E. G. 1. State. At ease reclin'd in rustic state Spring 17. In gliding state she wins her easy way: P. P. 39. They mock the air with idle state. Bard 4. Meek Newton's self bends from his state sublime, Inst. 25. But left church and state to Charles Townshend Char. 6. fSlow follow all the quality of State, Ch. Cr. 51. Stately. the stately brow of Windsor's heights Eton 5. Statesmen. gorgeous Dames, and Statesmen old . . . ap- pear. Bard 113. Stay. Stay, oh stay ! nor thus forlorn Leave me Bard 1 01. Stayed. Rap'd at the door, nor stay'd to ask, L. S. 55. Stays. Why then stays my sovereign, Agr. 164. Steadfast. Who taught this vast machine its steadfast laws, Prop? 17. Steady. Thy steady course of honour keep, Inst. 91. Steal. Steal to his closet at the hour of prayer; Shak. 14. Words that steal from my tongue, Am. Lines 6. Steam. the grateful steam Of flattery's incense, Agr. 34. Steed. Each bestride her sable steed. F. S. 63. saddled strait his coal-black steed; Odin 2. Steel. steel our hearts to war? E. G. 69. Steep. Now rowling down the steep amain, P. P. 10. Woods, that wave o'er Delphi's steep, P. P. 66. down the steep of Snowdon's shaggy side Bard 1 1. Long her strains in sorrow steep: F. S. 47. Down the yawning steep he rode, Odin 3. To steep in slumbers each benighted sense? Ign. 18. And down the steep he led Tasso 43. Steeps. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams 10. Stem. Owen . . . Fairest flower of Roderic's stem, Owen 3. wont to stem With stubborn nerves the tide, Agr. 108. Step. One false step is ne'er retriev'd Cat 38. come on, With sturdy step and slow, Hippome- don; Stat? 2. Age step 'twixt love and me, Prop? 12. Swift shoots the Village»maid . . . Smooth, with- out 6tep, Tasso 20. Steps 128 Strains Steps. Still on thy solemn steps attend; Adv. 29. with hasty steps ... To meet the sun El. 99. pacing forth With solemn steps and slow, Inst. 36. I have pursued your steps, Agr. 54. Behind the steps that Misery treads, Vic. 39. And first to Ascalon their steps they bend, Tasso^. Stern. Stern rugged Nurse! thy rigid lore Adv. 13. Sternly. Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly? Dante 56. Stiles. Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, L. S. 54. Still. Still is the . . . hand of Care: Spring 21. Still had she gaz'd; Cat 13. Where grateful Science still adores Eton 3. Still as they run they look behind, Eton 38. Still on thy solemn steps attend: Adv. 29. Onward still his way he takes Odin 13. frail memorial still erected nigh, El. 78. In still small Accents whisp'ring El. Mas. 83. The still small voice of gratitude. Inst. 64. one . . . may still With equal power resume Agr. 90. dost thou still oppose Thy leaden aegis Ign. 13. Still stretch, . . . The massy sceptre Ign. 15. For ever gone — yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. Freedom still withstands Th' encroaching tide, E. G. 60. Still, . . . See a kindred Grief pursue; Vic. 37. Art he invokes new horrors still to bring. View 12. Still may his Bard in softer fights engage; Prop} 3. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop? 1. ■j-Still to ripen 'em is wanted; Ode 4. Stillness, all the air a solemn stillness holds, El. 6. Stings. The stings of Falshood those shall try, Eton 75. Stint. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shah. 2. Stirred. No Nereid stirr'd: Cat 34. Stirring. See Spirit-stirring. Stole. where . . . First the genuine ardour stole. Inst. 22. Me from myself the soft Enchantress stole; Prop? 75. Stone. the lay Grav'd on the stone El. 116. nor wept, for all Within was Stone: Dante 54. Stones. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. Stony. And batter Cadmus' walls with stony showers, Stat. 1 18. Stood. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. With haggard eyes the Poet stood; Bard 18. He stood as mute as poor Macleane. L. S. 120. he stood trembling, Scar'd at the sound, Agr. 31. The Herd stood drooping by: Vic. 24. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams 10. Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25. Stop. Marking . . . Fear to stop, Owen 36. Stopped. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat. 1 40. Store. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. Stores. Owen . . . nor heaps his brooded stores, Owen 5. Instruction . . . idly lavishes her Stores, E. G. 14. Storied. Can storied urn or animated bust El. 41. Storm. Now the storm begins to lower F. S. 1. Storms. sad refuge from the storms of Fate! P. P. 45. Stormy. tongue, That hush'd the stormy main: Bard 30. Stout. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. Mov'd the stout heart of England's Queen, L. S. 15. Straddles. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — C. C. 9. Straight. saddled strait his coal-black steed; Odin 2. straight Ariseing all they cried, Dante 64. •(•See Folly, Fashion, Foppery, straight appear, Ch. Cr. 16. Strain. the loom, Where the dusky warp we strain, F. S. 6. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat. 1 54. Whence the soft Strain and ever-melting Verse? Prop? 2. But nor Callimachus' enervate Strain Prop? 55. Strains. every labouring sinew strains, Eton 86. Slow melting strains their Queen's approach de- clare: P. P. 36. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bard 120. Strait 129 Strong a thousand strains Triumphant tell Bard MS. 109. Long her strains in sorrow steep: F . S.47. Strains of Immortality! F. S. 48. fTragick Numbers, buskin'd Strains, Ode^i. Strait. See Straight. Strand. Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat. 1 40. Strange. The Poet felt a strange disorder: L. S. 82. so 't be strange, and dreadful. Agr. 171. Stranger. A stranger yet to pain! Eton 14. when yet a stranger To adoration, Agr. 33. Straw-built. The swallow twitt'ring from the straw-built shed, El. 18. Stray. Their sober wishes never learn 'd to stray; El. 74. Or lawless, o'er their Ivory Margin stray: Prop. 3 8. Strayed. Where once my careless childhood stray'd, Eton 13. where lucid Avon stray'd, P. P. 85. Strays, while yet he strays Along the . . . vale Clerke II. Stream. See also Torrent-stream. The Genii of the stream: Cat 15. the rich stream of music winds along P. P. 7. Nor wash his visage in the stream, Odin 67. Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand ; Stat. 1 38. Against the stream the waves secure he trod, Tasso 15. And paint the margin of the costly stream, Tasso 64. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop. 2 47. To mourn the Glories of his sevenfold Stream, Prop. 3 50. ■(■slow down the Silver stream. Ch. Cr. 57. Streamed. Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air Bard 20. Streams. Rich streams of regal bounty pour'd, Inst. 52. ■(■Purling streams and cooling breezes Ode 20. Street. See Grub-street. Strength. They guard . . . what by strength they gain'd? E. G. 95. could they catch his strength, Bent. 13. The strength and harmony-of Life. Vic. 44. Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Stat. 1 5. Phlegyas . . . Summon 'd his strength, Stat. 1 33. the panting Sire Of Strength bereft, Dante 38. Strengthen. dress thy plea, and Burrhus strengthen it Agr. 150. Strengthens. Sings in its rapid way, and strengthens as it flies; Stat. 1 50. Stretch. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch Spring 11. Soon their ample sway shall stretch F. S. 39. His listless length . . . would he stretch, El. 103. Still stretch, . . . The massy sceptre Ign. 15. Stretched. See also Out-stretched. She stretch'd in vain Cat 22. Again she stretch'd, Cat 26. The dauntless child Stretch'd forth P. P. 88. Earth's monster-brood stretch'd on their iron bed, Prop? 41. Strews. many a holy text around she strews, El. 83. Strife, the madding crowd's ignoble strife, El. 73. with Reason and thyself at Strife, El. Mas. 85. And blended form, with artful strife, Vic. 43. Strike. bade him strike The noble quarry. Agr. 46. Strikes. Hark! 'tis nature strikes the lyre, Vic. 19. Not all that strikes your wand'ring eyes Cat MS. 39. String. To string our nerves and steel our hearts E. G. 69. Strings. See also Shoe-strings. give to rapture all thy trembling strings. P. P. 2. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, Bard 119. Her artful hand across the sounding Strings. Prop. 3 16. Stripling. 't will profit you And please the stripling. Agr. 13. Strive. strive to mend A broken character View 3. Stroke. bow'd the woods beneath their sturdy stroke! El. 28. As the thunder's fiery stroke, Conan 7. Stroked. She strok'd up her belly, C. C. 22. And strok'd down her band — C. C. 22. Strokes. There the thund'ring strokes begin, Owen 23. Strong. Deep, majestic, smooth, and strong. P. P. 8. Keep the tissue close and strong. F. S. 16. Owen swift, and Owen strong; Owen 2. But none . . . return, Save . . . Conan strong, Hoel 21. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand, Stat. 1 15. Strongest 130 Sufferings Artful and strong he pois'd the well-known weight Stat? 3. •j-But their love could not be strong. Rond. 16. ^Strong to love, — and then to part, Rond. 17. Strongest. On expectation's strongest wing to soar Agr. 42. Struck. Struck the deep sorrows of his lyre. Bard 22. T was Milton struck the deep-ton'd shell, Inst. 23. Structures. See Mountain-structures. Struggle. souls That struggle with the yoke. Agr. 127. Struggling. See Struggling. Struggles. And struggles to elude my longing Eyes, Prop? 24. Struggling. The struggling pangs of conscious truth El. 69. Nor lofty Carthage struggling with her Fate. Prop? 40. I swallow'd down My struggling Sorrow, Dante 69. Strung. Brac'd all his nerves, and every sinew strung; Stat? 7. Struts. fBehold K struts, Ch. Cr. 49. Stubborn. Their furrow oft the stubborn glebe has broke: El. 26. wont to stem With stubborn nerves the tide, Agr. 109. stubborn souls, That struggle with the yoke. Agr. 127. The stubborn elements confess her sway, E. G.81. Stung. Stung by a senseless word, Agr. 133. Stunk. And foxes stunk and Iitter'd in St. Paul's. View 24. Sturdy. bow'd the woods beneath their sturdy stroke! El. 28. come on, With sturdy step and slow, Hippome- don; Stat? 2. Stutter. And Glyn cut Phizzes, and Tom Neville stutter. Com. Lines 3. Styack. Styack has often seen the sight L. S. 103. Subject. That the soft Subject of my Song I make, Prop? 14. Sublime. arms sublime, that float upon the air, P. P. 38. Nor second He, that rode sublime P. P. 95. Sublime their starry fronts they rear; Bard 112. Meek Newton's self bends from his state sublime, Inst. 25. Sublimer. So from our works sublimer fumes shall rise; Shak. 22. Submission. And doff their hats with due submission: L. S. no. Submit. Dryden's harmony submit to mine. Bent. 16. Submits. Submits the fasces of her sway, Inst. 86. Substantial. till substantial Night Has reassum'd Odin 91. Subterraneous. Through subterraneous passages they went, Tasso 49. Succeed. What idle progeny succeed Eton 28. Succeeding. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. Success. Exalt the brave, and idolize Success; El. Mas. 74. Successful. successful dost thou still oppose Ign. 13. Such. Such is the race of Man: Spring 32. Such forms, as glitter in the Muse's ray, P. P. 119. Such were the sounds, that . . . scatter'd wild dismay, Bar d 9. such as, wand'ring near her secret bow'r, El. 11. To rid the manour of such vermin. L. S. 52. 'Gainst four such eyes were no protection. L. S. 96. such as . . . Come (sweep) along some winding entry L. S.101. Nero To such a mother owes; Agr. 58. Who had such liberal power Agr. 89. Such a sheep-biting look, C. C. 6. such a pick-pocket air! C. C. 6. To reject him for such peccadillos, were odd; C. C. 29. With such a gleam affrights Pangaea's field, Stat. 1 29. such as mought entrance find within Dante 60. ■(■But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Sucked. And suck'd the eggs, and kill'd the pheasants. L. S. 48. Sudden. To sudden fate . . . Half of thy heart we con- secrate. Bard 97. A sudden fit of ague shook him, L. S. 119. Sighs sudden and frequent, Am. Lines 5. And wonder at the sudden Funeral. Prop? 98. Suffering, far less shall be Our Suffering, Dante 66. Sufferings. To each his suff'rings: Eton 91. Suffices 131 Swallow Suffices. the world, you gave him, Suffices not Agr. 59. Sullen. the sullen Cares And frantic Passions hear P. P. 15. Slowly breath'd a sullen sound. Odin 26. the sullen year Saw the snowy whirlwind fly; Vic. 21. Or the bull, with sullen roar, . . . advance? Caradoc 2. Sulphureous. Sulphureous veins and liveing silver shine, Tasso 59 Sultry. the sultry climes, that spread Where Nile£. G. 100 Nor changing Skies can hurt, nor sultry Air. Prop. 3 94 Sum. Gave not to know their Sum of Misery, Dante 43 Summer. The summer Friend, the flatt'ring Foe; Adv. 22 Summer-bed. Nile redundant o'er his Summer-bed E. G. 101. Summer-gale. Far from the sun and summer-gale, P. P. 83. Summer's. The winter's snow, the summer's heat, Odin 32. Summit. As when from ^Etna's smoking summit broke, Stat. 2 18. Summoned. Phlegyas . . . Summon'd his strength, Stat? 33. Sun. Quick-glancing to the sun. Spring 30. Thy sun is set, Spring 49. Far from the sun and summer-gale, P. P. 83. With orient hues, unborrow'd of the Sun: P. P. 120. Ere the ruddy sun be set, F. S. 21. Clouds of carnage blot the sun. F. S. 50. To meet the sun upon the . . . lawn. El. 100. With whistful eyes pursue the setting sun. El. Mas. 120. 'T is time to go, the sun is high advanc'd, Agr. 158. The common Sun, the air, the skies, Vic. 51. When blazing 'gainst the sun it shines from far, Stat. 1 30. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. fTill again the rolling Sun Bursts Ode 41. Sung. 'T was the Nightingale that sung! Song 6. Sunk. he sunk to endless night. Bard Lett. 2 144. Sun's. Nor see the sun's departing beam, Odin 68. The sun's pale sister, drawn by magic strain, Stat. 1 54. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. Suns, opener skies, and suns of fiercer flame E. G. 64. Sunshine. The sunshine of the breast: Eton 44. The . . . swarm that wantons in the sunshine Agr. 147. Superior. Heavier toil, superior pain. Inst. 58. Supple. bow the supple knee, and court the times Agr. 101. Suppliant's. Oh, gently on thy Suppliant's head, Adv. 33. Supply. scarce religion does supply Her muttered re- quiems, Bard MS. 73. The place of fame and elegy supply: El. 82. Supreme. Sailing with supreme dominion P. P. 116. Sure. — Sure Delia will tell me! Am. Lines 8. Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Stat. 1 39. fFor, too sure, they love not well. Rond. 24. •(•Great D Jraws near — the Dutchess sure is come, Ch. Cr. 1. Surely. Surely the Masians too, and those of Egypt, Agr. 115. Surge. How the rude surge its sandy Bounds control; Prop. 2 37. Surges. And parting surges round the vessel roar; Stat. 2 21. Surrounded. With beauty, with pleasure surrounded, to lan- guish — Am. Lines 1. Surrounding. On surrounding foes advance? Caradoc 3. Surrounds. His sable Sons with nearer Course surrounds E. G. 24. Survey. th' expanse below . . . survey, Eton 7. This spacious animated Scene survey E. G. 22. Susan. Nor Susan [Harry, Wal., Whar., Dods.] heard. Cat 35. Suspends. Suspends th' inferior laws that rule our clay: E. G. 80. Suspends the crowd with expectation warm; Stat. 1 44. Swain. some hoary-headed Swain El. 97. Swains. See Fellow-swains. Swallow. The swallow twitt'ring from the straw-built shed, El. 18. Swallowed 132 Sympathy Swallowed. I swallow'd down My struggling Sorrow, Dante 68. Swan. fS, sails the Swan Ch. Cr. 57. Swarm. Swarm, that in thy noon-tide beam were born? Bard 69. around thee call The gilded swarm Agr. 147. Sway. Regardless of the sweeping Whirlwind's sway, Bard-j$. Soon their ample sway shall stretch F. S. 39. Submits the fasces of her sway, Inst. 86. and arbitrary sway: Agr. 79. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. where the deluge burst, with sweepy sway E. G. 48. The stubborn elements confess her sway, E. G. 81. Swayed. the rod of empire might have sway'd, El. 47. Swearing. And all the town rings of his swearing and roaring! C. C. 16. Swears. — he swears — so do I: C. C. 28. Sweat. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness? Agr. 97. Sweep. Black and huge along they sweep, Owen 17. Such as . . . Come (sweep) along some winding entry L. S. 102. with resistless sweep Vic. 59. To rush, and sweep them from the world! Hoel 4. How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop. 2 23. Sweeping. Regardless of the sweeping Whirlwind's sway, Bard 7 5. Sweepy. where the deluge burst, with sweepy sway E. G. 48. Sweet. Parent of sweet and solemn-breathing airs, P. P. 14. In loose numbers wildly sweet P. P. 61. Attemper'd sweet To virgin-grace. Bard 118. Sweet is the breath of vernal shower, Inst. 61. The bee's collected treasures sweet, Inst. 62. Sweet music's melting fall, Inst. 63. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shak. 2. Me may Castalia's sweet recess detain, Prop. 2 2. Sweeten. hours ... to sweeten liberty: Eton 34. Sweeter. sweeter yet The . . . voice of gratitude. Inst. 63. Sweetness. waste its sweetness on the desert air. El. 56. Sweets. No hive hast thou of hoarded sweets, Spring 46. The sweets of kindness lavishly indulg'd Agr. 73. Swell. as the choral warblings round him swell, Inst. 24. The Soil, . . . Forbids her Gems to swell, E. G. 7. Swelling. •(•Copious numbers, swelling grain; Ode 8. Swells. The pealing anthem swells the note of praise. El. 40. The simplest note that swells the gale, Vic. 50. Swept. She swept, she hiss'd, she ripen'd and grew rough, Par. on Ep. 2. Swift. Owen swift, and Owen strong; Owen 2. Swift at the word, from out the gazing host, Stat. 1 4. Swift shoots the Village-maid in rustic play Tasso 19. Swift-descending. the torrent's swift-descending flood, E. G. 92. Swifter. In swifter measures animated run, Bent. 11. Swiftly. happiness too swiftly flies, Eton 97. Swollen. Swoll'n with new force, and late-descending rains- Tasso 10. Sword. Sword [Blade, Whar.], that once a Monarch bore, F. S. 15. Sword with clattering buckler meet, F. S. Whar. 23. At Aix, his voluntary sword he drew, Williams 5. Did the sword of Conan mow The crimson har- vest Conan 9. Purg'd by the sword, and purified by fire, View 21. Swore. My Lady . . . Swore by her coronet L. S. 50. Thyrsis, when we parted, swore Song 1. Sylla. Sylla has his friends, Agr. 100. Syllani. pitied ghosts Of the Syllani, Agr. 176. Symmetry. To local symmetry and life awake! Bent. 8. Sympathetic. the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94. By sympathetic musings here delayed, El. Mas. no. The social Smile, the sympathetic Tear. E. G. 37. Sympathy. a glance . . . They send of tender sympathy Inst. 20. my lines a secret sympathy Bent. 26. Symphonious 133 Tear Symphonious. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, Bard 119. Join with glad voice the loud symphonious lay. Inst. 88. Symptoms. Ah! say, . . . how these symptoms befell me? Am. Lines 7. T is hard th' elusive Symptoms to explore: Prop? 95. System. Has from them his system took; Satire 30. Tabby. Demurest of the tabby kind, Cat 4. Table. But left a spell upon the table. L. S. 80. From table she rose, C. C. 21. Tail. Her conscious tail her joy declar'd; Cafj. Tainted. sick'oing virtue fly the tainted ground? E. G. 71. Take. A thousand rills their mazy progress take: P. P. 4. This pencil take (she said), P. P. 89. take me to thy peaceful shade again. Ign. 6. Another touch, another temper take, E. G. 79. Fix'd by his touch a lasting essence take; Bent. 6. Take back, what once was yours. Dante 68. Taken. He ne'er was for a conj'rer taken. L. S. 128. Takes. Onward still his way he takes Odin 13. She curtsies, as she takes her chair, L. S. m. The Master of Catherine Takes them all Satire 20. Taking. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. Toph. 8. Tale. Mortal, thou that hear'st the tale, F. S. 57. Dost . . . their artless tale relate; El. 94 ; Mas. 78. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Ilium Prop? 37. And hates the Tale of Troy Prop? 74. That which yet remains ... (a horrid tale) Dante 19. Taliessin. Hear from the grave, great Taliessin [Taliesin, Lett. 2 ] Bard ill. Talk. dost thou talk to me ... of danger, Agr. 27. Talks. — for he talks about God — C. C. 30. Talymalfra's. Talymalfra's rocky shore Owen 25. Tame. tame th' unwilling Deep. E. G. 43. Tamer. Thou Tamer of the human breast, Adv. 2. Tantalus. May the long Thirst of Tantalus allay, Prop? 89. Tardy. The tardy rhymes that us'd to linger on, Bent. 9. She woo's the tardy spring: Vic. 4. Tares, f Tares of Similes choak the roots, Ode 11. Tarnished. In peaked hoods and mantles tarnish'd,L. 5. 105. Tarts. Better to bottom tarts Shak. 17. Task. Hail the task, and hail the hands! F. S. 53. The Heroines undertook the task, L. S. 53. Taste. Eager to taste the honied spring, Spring 26. The Proud are taught to taste of pain, Adv. 6. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. lured ... To taste of hollow kindness, Agr. 19. Tastes. And tastes it as it goes. Vic. 56. Tattle. they sing, they laugh, they tattle, L. S. 58. Taught. The Proud are taught to taste of pain, Adv. 6. her that . . . taught his novice hand Agr. 30. to Him . . . Who taught this vast machine Prop? 17. Teach. Teach me to love and to forgive, Adv. 46. That teach the rustic moralist to die. El. 84. wrinkled beldams Teach it Agr. 136. love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. Tea-cup. Under a tea-cup he might lie, L. S. 67. Team. How jocund did they drive their team afield ! El. 27. a team of harness'd monarchs bend Ign. 38. Tear. The tear forgot as soon as shed, Eton 43. mocks the tear it forc'd to flow; Eton 77. Pity, dropping soft the sadly-pleasing tear. Adv. 3 2. afford A tear to grace his obsequies. Bard 66. He gave to Mis'ry all he had, a tear, El. 123. you spied a tear stand in her eye, Agr. 10. The social Smile, the sympathetic Tear. E. G. 37. A sigh; an unavailing tear; Clerke 14. while o'er the Place You drop the Tear, Prop? 106. Tear, vb. These shall the fury Passions tear, Eton 61. their flaxen tresses tear, And snowy veils, Odin 77. and all his [he, Lett. 4 ] scribbles, tear. Shak. 16. •(is to tear the closing wound. Rond. 32. Tearest 134 Than E. G. 6. Eton 60. Tearest. That tear'st the bowels of thy mangled Mate, Bard 58. Tears. in the vale of tears beneath, Eton 81 the sacred source of sympathetic Tears. P. P. 94 From Cambria's curse, from Cambria's tears! Bard 8 Their tears, their little triumphs o'er, Inst. 48 At once give loose to Utterance, and to Tears. Dante 9 if thou weep not now, Where are thy Tears? Dante 48 Tease. Coarse panegyricks would but teaze her. L. S. 34 Teaze. See Tease. Teem. The Soil, . . . will not teem in vail Tell. Ah, tell them, they are men! a thousand strains Triumphant tell Bard MS. no. Tell me what is done below, Odin 40. Tell me, whence their sorrows rose: Odin 79. Tell your master, His mother shall obey him. Agr. 2. tell him too, Agr. 88. tell me! say Agr. 92. Tell them, tho* 't is an awful thing to die, Stanza I. — Sure Delia will tell me! Am. Lines 8. When she died, I can't tell, C. C. 14. nor Callimachus' enervate Strain May tell of Jove, Prop? 56. Sailors to tell of Winds and Seas delight, Prop? 59. fl tell her so in elegy. Ode 30. Telling. yet if the telling may Beget Dante 6. Tells. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams II. Temper. Another touch, another temper take, E. G. 79. our master's temper natural Was fashion'd fair Shak. 9. Tempered. Temper'd to thy warbled lay. P. P. 26. Tempest. raise A tempest that shall shake Agr. 91. Then, with a tempest whirl, and wary eye, Stat? 8. Tempestuous. a River roll'd its flood Tempestuous, Tasso 8. Tempt. Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Eton 71. To tempt the dangers of the doubtful way; Tasso 2. Tempts. Not all that tempts [strikes, Whar.] Cat 40. Nor tempts he yet the plain, Stat. 1 45. Tenacious. tenacious of thy right divine, Ign. 15. The orb on high tenacious of its course, Stat? 10. Tend. Antium; there to tend Her household cares, Agr. 7. Tender. The tender for another's pain; Eton 93. a glance . . . They send of tender sympathy Inst. 20. check their tender Hopes with . . . Fear, E. G. 20. Tenderest. Scatters his freshest, tenderest green. Vic. 8. Tenet. The Master of Benet Is of the like tenet; Satire 28. Tenfold. Till Lok has burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. Tenor. Learn the tenour of our song. F. S. 58. the noiseless tenor of their way. El. 76. the silent Tenour of thy Doom. El. Mas. 88. Terrific. Scared at thy frown terrific, Adv. 17. terrific Maid, F. S. 17. Terror. The terror of his beak, P. P. 24. Of Terror that, and thrilling Fears, P. P. MS. 93. Terror's. There Confusion, Terror's child, Owen 37. Terrors. Not in thy Gorgon terrors clad, Adv. 35. What Terrors round him wait! Bard 60. new terrors still to bring. View Nich. 12. And calm'd the terrors of his claws in gold. Stat? 27. The hissing terrors round Alecto's head, Prop? 42. Tester. And o'er the bed and tester clamber, L. S. 64. Text. many a holy text . . . she strews, Texture. See the griesly texture growl Thalia. •{•Perhaps Thalia prompts a Sonnet Thames. Wanders the hoary Thames along Say, father Thames, Than. More hideous than their Queen more to Innocence . El. 83. F. S. 9. Ode 35. Eton 9. Eton 21. Eton 84. Than Pow'r and Genius El. Mas. 76. no other lustre, than the blood Of . . . race, 4ff- 37. pretensions Drowsier than theirs, Agr. 104. More deadly . . . than is to me The cool inju- rious Agr. 161. Than thus be patch'd and cobbled in one's grave, Shak. 20. Thanks 135 There Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. Tho' wiser than Nestor Ext. Keene 2. And fairer than Esther, Ext. Keene 3. Art it requires, and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. Thanks. Thanks to the rosy queen Of amorous thefts: Agr. 188. That, omitted. 'The, omitted. " Theatre's. The theatre's green height and woody wall Stat? 14. Theban. That the Theban Eagle bear P. P. 115. Thebes. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Ilium Prop? 37. Thee, omitted. Thefts. the rosy queen Of amorous thefts: Agr. 189. Their, omitted. Theirs. Gay hope is theirs by fancy fed, Eton 41. Theirs buxom health Eton 45. pretensions Drowsier than theirs, -Agr. 104. My struggling Sorrow, nor to heighten theirs: Dante 69. Them, omitted. See 'Em. Then. and then a claw, Cat 20. Then whirl the wretch from high, Eton 72. Then I leave thee to repose. Odin 80. then was the time To shrink from danger; Agr. 47. fear might then have worn The mask Agr. 48. Why then stays my sovereign, Agr. 164. Say then, ... by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. Then he shambles and straddles so oddly — C. C. 9. Then his character, Phyzzy, C. C. 13. If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Shak. 13. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; View 22. Then thus the king: — Stat. 1 1. Then thus: Stat. 1 16. Then grasp'd its weight, Stat. 1 42. Then, with a tempest whirl, and wary eye, Stat? 8. Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop? 15. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop? 47. When then my Fates Prop? 99. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop? 105. then on my Children's Eyes . . . my Sight I fix'd, Dante 52. for then Hunger had reft my Eye-sight Dante 78. Then with unrelenting Eye Dante 82. ■(Then for a Moiety of the Year Ode\\. ■fto love, — and then to part, Rond. 1, 9, 17, 25, 33. fThen have left, to love anew: Rond. 7. •(•Then to sever what is bound, Rond. 31. fThen one faint glimpse of Queen Elizabeth; Ch. Cr. 10. ■(•then perches on the spray, Ch. Cr. 41. There. Thy philosophic Train be there Adv. 43. There the Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 15. There the thund'ring strokes begin, Owen 23. There the press, and there the din; Owen 24. Hasty, hasty Rout is there, Owen 34. There Confusion, Terror's child, Owen 37. There [Oft, Mas.] at the foot of yonder . . . beech, El. 101. There scatter'd oft, the earliest of the Year, El. Pem. 117 ; Mas. 137. loves to buildf,] and [&] warble there, El. Pem. 119 ; Mas. 139. There they alike in trembling hope repose, El. 127. His frailties there in trembling hope repose El. Mas. 151. The Huntingdons and Hattons there L. S. 3. A House there is, (and that's enough) L. S. 21. that thereabouts there lurk'd ... a Poet, L. S. 43. The Court was sate, the Culprit there, L. S. 97. There sit the sainted sage, the bard divine, Inst. 15. And either Henry there, Inst. 45. Antium ; there to tend Her household cares, Agr. 7. at least there are who know Agr. 15. there will not want, . . . ears to own Agr. 122. Soranus there, And Cassius; -Agr. 124. a vain tradition, As there were magic in it? Agr. 135- there before His high tribunal Agr. 143. Seneca be there In gorgeous phrase Agr. 148. gloomy Sway have fix'd her Empire there, E. G. 19. There Industry and Gain their Vigils keep, E. G. 42. There languid Pleasure sighs in every Gale. E.G.4S- faith sincere, And soft humanity were there. Clerke 6. There first in blood his infant honour seal'd; JVilliams 6. There pipes the woodlark, Birds I. the song-thrush there Scatters his loose notes Birds 1. 'T was there he aim'd the meditated harm, Stat? 22. The Po was there to see, Tasso 55. The diamond there attracts the wondrous sight, Tasso 69. There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop? 10. Nor Tale of Thebes, nor Ilium there should be, Prop? 37. And there the ensanguined Wave of Sicily, Prop? 44. Thereabouts 136 Thorn Lanfranc there And Sigismundo, Dante 32. ■(•See Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch. Cr. 28. Thereabouts. that thereabouts there lurk'd ... a Poet, L.S.43. These. These shall the fury Passions tear, Eton 61. Thine too these golden keys, P. P. 91. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bar d 40. Long on these mould'ring bones Odin 31. What Virgins these, . . . That bend Odin 75. Nor you, ye Proud, impute to These the fault, El. 37. If Memory to these no Trophies raise. El. Dods., Pem., Mas. 38. these bones from insult to protect El. 77. in these lines their artless tale relate; El. 94 ; Mas. 78. in these consecrated bowers, Inst. 7. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. much I hope these walls alone Agr. 22. These were your gift, Agr. 80. these, by ties confirm 'd, Of old respect Agr. 113. These hated walls that seem to mock Agr. 156. These Ears, alas! for other Notes repine, West 5. A different object do these Eyes require: West 6. Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. Ah! say, . . . how these symptoms befell me? Am. Lines 7. These conscious shame withheld, Stat. 1 25. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Prop. 2 13. These soft inglorious joys my hours engage; Prop. 2 51. These miserable Limbs with Flesh you cloath'd; Dante 67. f But, my Dear, these Flies, they say, Ode 49. They, omitted. Thick. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch Spring II. Thin. & If the thin Coan Web her Shape reveal, Prop? 9. Thine. and Misery not thine own. Adv. MS. 9. Thine too these golden keys, P. P. 91. Be thine Despair, and scept'red Care, Bard 141. Thing. Tell them, tho' 't is an awful thing to die, Stanza I. Things. things that but whisper'd Have arch'd Agr. 168. The Master of King's Copies them in all things; Satire 18. Great things and full of wonder ... I shall un- fold; Tasso 35. Think. the Muse shall sit, and think Spring 16. Nor think to draw them from their dread abode, El. Mas. 146. You think, you spied a tear Agr. 10. Think too how oft in weak . . . minds Agr. 72. to think, what my poor Heart Foresaw, Dante 46. fin vain you think to find them under E, Ch. Cr. 13. Thinkest. think'st thou, yon sanguine cloud, Bard 135. Thinks. thinks to quench the fire Agr. 84. Third. A third arose, Stat. 1 II. Third in the labours of the disc come on, Stat. 2 1. Thirst. * Fell Thirst and Famine scowl BardSi. Famine at feasts, and thirst amid the stream; Prop. 2 47. May the long Thirst of Tantalus allay, Prop? 89. Thirsty. And drop'd his thirsty lance P. P. 19. This. Ambition this shall tempt to rise, Eton 71. This racks the joints, this fires the veins, Eton 85. This pencil take (she said), P. P. 89. This can unlock the gates of Joy; P. P. 92. Who is this, with voice unblest, Odin MS. 35. This the force of Eirin hiding, Owen 11. this pleasing anxious being El. 86. this long deserted shade. El. Mas. 112. By this time all the Parish know it L. S. 42. Welcome, ... To this, thy kindred train, and me: Inst. 68. her that arm'd This painted Jove, Agr. 30. This mighty emperor, this dreaded hero, Agr. 93. to check this dangerous passion, Agr. 106. not to one in this benighted age Bent. 17. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams II. On this congenial spot he fix'd his choice; View 5. Why this unavailing haste ? Song 8. That to avoid, and this to emulate. Stat. 2 5. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop. 2 9. Who taught this vast machine Prop. 2 17. How flames . . . Shall sink this beauteous fabric Prop. 2 28. And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop? 88. Ruggieri, Pisa's perfidious Prelate this: Dante 14. headed by this The deadliest. Dante 34. fSo I to you this Trifle give, Ode 53. Tho'. See Though. Thorn. the stone beneath yon aged thorn. El. 116. And the buds that deck the thorn! Song 4. Thorny 137 Throbbing Thorny. Boar . . . Wallows beneath the thorny shade. Bard 94. tost On the thorny bed of Pain, Vic. 46. Those. The stings of Falshood those shall try, Eton 75. Those in the deeper vitals rage: Eton 87. Beneath those rugged elms, El. 13. the Masians too, and those of Egypt, Agr. 115. unfriended, by those kindly Cares, E. G. 10. . ■ If realms beneath those fabled torments know, * Prop? 39. And half disclose those Limbs it should conceal; Prop? 10. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? 11. Thou, omitted. Though. tho' he inherit Nor the pride, nor ample pinion, P. P. 113. Tho' fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing Bard 3. vain tho' kind enquiry El. Mas. m. Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it. L. S. 16. though school'd . . . To bow the supple knee, Agr. 100. Though by me ye bled, He was the cause. Agr. 180. The Soil, tho' fertile, will not teem in vain, E. G. 6. And scatter with a free, though frugal, Hand E. G. 17. Though now a book, and interleaved you see. Shak. 4. And mariners, though shipwreck'd, dread to land. View 8. The Bishop of Chester, Tho' wiser than Nestor Ext. Keene 2. Tell them, tho' *t is an awful thing to die, Stanza 1. A vestment unadorn'd, though white as new- fal'n Snows; Tasso 14. ■(■But, tho' Flowers his ardour raise, Ode 15. Thought. Thought would destroy their paradise. Eton 98 Immersed in rapt'rous thought profound, Adv. 26 My thought aches at him; Agr. 160 Spread the young Thought, E.G. 12 Unmanly Thought ! E. G. 72 See, . . . each transitory thought Bent. 5 so was thought somewhat odd; Char. 3 f For one Silk-worm thought that thrives Ode 37 Thoughtless. The thoughtless day, Eton 48 Laughter, Noise and thoughtless Joy, Adv. 19, The thoughtless World to Majesty may bow, El. Mas. 73. Thoughts. See aho Poppy-thoughts, thoughts, that breath, and words, that burn. P. P. 1 10. And Satan's self had thoughts of taking orders. Toph. 8. To Providence, to Him my thoughts I 'd raise, Prop? 16. fand thoughts Like Butterflies, their Prison shun Ode 44. Thousand. A thousand rills their mazy progress take: P. P. 4. From Cambria's thousand hills a thousand strains Bard MS. 109. Thousand Banners round him burn: Owen 32. fire A thousand haughty hearts, dgr. 17. and thousand beauties see Prop? 19. Thracian. So glittering shows the Thracian Godhead's shield, Stat? 28. Thracia's. On Thracia's hills the Lord of War P. P. 17. Thrasea. Vetus, too, and Thrasea, Agr. 125. Thread. The thread is spun. BardyS. Threat. Move through the Sacred Way and vainly threat, Prop? 52. Threatening. With thund'ring voice, and threat'ning mien, Adv. 38. Threats. The threats of pain and ruin El. 62. waste the fruitless hours In threats unexecuted? VU Agr - I5S ' Three. Squadrons three against him came; Owen 10. where three sisters of old C. C. 3. my other three before my Eyes Died Dante 75. for three days more I grop'd Dante 77. Threw. And to small distance threw. Stat? 6. Thrice. Thrice he traced the runic rhyme; Odin 22. Thrice pronounc'd, . . . The thrilling verse Odin 23. Thrice hath Hyperion roll'd his . . . race, Ign. 11. Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 12. Thrilling. Of Horrour . . . and thrilling Fears, P. P. 93. The thrilling verse that wakes the Dead : din 24. the trumpet's thrilling voice, Agr. 95. warbles high His trembling thrilling ecstasy; Vic. 14. Thrives. fFor one Silk-worm thought that thrives Ode 37. Thro'. See Through. Throat. The Attic warbler pours her throat, Spring 5. His shaggy throat he open'd wide, Odin 6. Throbbing. Horrour, Tyrant of the throbbing breast. Bard 130. Horror . . . that chills the throbbing breast. Bard Lett. 2 130. Throne 138 Till Throne. The living Throne, the saphire-blaze, P. P. 99. to wade through slaughter to a throne, El. 67. Lethargic nods upon her ebon throne. Ign. 24. Throng. Bursting through the bloody throng Hoel 22. Thronging. |See Israel, and all Judah thronging there. Ch. Cr. 28. Through. thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. how thro' the peopled air Spring 24. flutter thro' life's little day, Spring 36. Thro' richest purple Cat 17. Thro' verdant vales, P. P. 9. Thro' the azure deep of air: P. P. 117. The shrieks of death, thro' Berkley's roofs that ring, Bard 55. thro' the kindred squadrons mow their way. Bar d 86. Wading through th' ensanguin'd field, F. S. 30. thro' each winding vale . . . the notes prolong. F. S. 59. through the long-drawn isle and fretted vault El. 39. to wade through slaughter El. 67. thro' the cool sequester'd Vale of Life El. Mas. 87. thro' the church-way path El. 114. Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, L. S. 54. to shine Thro' every unborn age, Inst. 17. Thro' the wild waves . . . Thy . . . course of honour keep, Inst. 89. Through various life I have pursued Agr. 54. dews Lethean through the land dispense Ign. 17. thro' Ages by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. through Zembla's snows? E. G. 77. Bursting through the bloody throng Hoel 22. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous borders, Toph. 7. through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 49. Dismiss'd at length, they break through all delay Tasso 1. Through subterraneous passages they went, Tasso 49. Here gems break through the night Tasso 63. Move through the Sacred Way and vainly threat, Prop? 52. Thro' a small crevice opening, Dante 22. Throw. throw A melancholy grace; Vic. 31. ^but fickle throw my trains . . . into the Fire: 0^33. Thrush. See Song-thrush. Thunder. With necks in thunder cloath'd, P. P. 106. Thundering. With thund'ring voice, and threat'ning mien, Adv. 38. Each her thundering faulchion wield; F. S. 62. There the thund'ring strokes begin, Owen 23. Thunder's. As the thunder's fiery stroke, Conan 7. Thus. nor thus [here, MS.] forlorn Bard 101. Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite, Odin 29. And thus they speak in soft accord Inst. 55. Thus ever grave and undisturb'd reflection Agr. 82. Thus far we 're safe. Agr. 188. Not thus of old, with ensigns . . . unfurl'd, Ign. 27. Thus Etough look'd; Toph. I. Than thu6 be patch'd and cobbled in one's grave. Shaft. 20. Then thus the King: — Stat. 1 1. Then thus: Stat. 1 16. His course he turn'd, and thus relieved their care : Tasso 26. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop. 3 1. thus Began. Would'st thou revive Dante 3. whom thus I ceaseless gnaw insatiate; Dante 7. fThus to love, — and then to part — Rond. 33. •(■Thus great R reigns in town, Ch. Cr. 53. Thwart. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. Thy, omitted. Thyrsis. Thyrsis, when we parted, swore Song 1. Thyself. with Reason and thyself at Strife, El. Mas. 85. Tide. See also Noon-tide, Torrent-tide. 'midst the tide Two angel forms were seen Cat 13. Deep in the roaring tide he plung'd Bard 144. wont to stem . . . the tide, Agr. 109. Th' encroaching tide, that drowns her . . . lands, E. G. 61. rise and glitter o'er the ambient tide E. G. 107. And sports and wantons o'er the frozen tide. Tasso 22. Ties. these, by ties confirm'd, Of old respect Agr. 113. Tiger's. A tiger's pride the victor bore away, Stat? 24. Till. Till down the eastern cliffs afar P. P. 52. Till fierce Hyperion from afar P. P. MS. 52. Till o'er the eastern cliffs from far P. P. MS. 52. Till the sad Nine in Greece's evil hour, P. P. 77. Till full before his fearless eyes Odin 15. Till from out the hollow ground Odin 25. Till he on Hoder y s corse shall smile Odin 69. Till Lok has burst his tenfold chain; Odin 90. till substantial Night Has reassum'd Odin 91. Till wrapt in flames, in ruin hurl'd, Odin 93. Till April starts, Vic. 5. Till time shall every grief remove, Clerke 15. 'Till 139 Too Nor stopp'd till it had cut the further strand. Stat. 1 40. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. ■j-Till again the rolling Sun Bursts Ode 43. Till. •j-Till they loved their love away; Rond. 6. Time. What time, where lucid Avon stray'd, P. P. 85. the flaming bounds of Place and Time: P. P. 98. » 'tis time to ride: F. S. Pem. 61. page Rich with the spoils of time El. 50. By this time all the Parish know it L. S. 42. then was the time To shrink Agr. 47. T is time to go, the sun is high Agr. 158. Till time shall every grief remove, Gierke 15. No — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. fBut the genial Hand of Time Ode 3. fSome have lov'd, to pass the time, Rond. 13. Timely. now the Hour Of timely Food approach 'd; Dante 50. Times. Eight times emerging from the flood Cat 3 1 . The times are alter'd quite and clean! L. S. 136. Oh! times for ever lost! Ign. 31. court the times With shows Agr. 101. Time-wearied. slacken'd sinews of time-wearied age. Agr. 139. Timid. Carry to him thy timid counsels. Agr. 87. Timorous. the tim'rous cloud That hangs on thy clear brow. Agr. 193. Tinge. Howe'er Opinion tinge the . . . Mind, E. G. 27. Tinklings. drowsy tinklings lull the distant folds: El. 8. Tints. Chastised by sabler tints of woe; Fie. 42. Tip. Brown sees thee sitting on his nose's tip, Com. Lines 4. Tip'd. See Tipped. Tipped. Cobham had . . . tip'd her arrows L. S. 32. Tires. And what Bootes' lazy waggon tires; Prop? 36. Tissue. weave . . . the tissue of thy line. Bard 48. Keep the tissue close and strong. F. S. 16. Tissues. But rustling in their silks and tissues. L. S. 24. Titles. Her boasted Titles and her golden Fields; E. G. 53. Tityus'. Scarce to nine acres Tityus' bulk confined, Prop? 43. Eton 54. Prop? 96. Prop? 33. Spring 21. To, omitted. To-day. Nor care beyond to-day: To-day the Lover walks, Together. gems . . . Together dart their intermingled rays, Bent. 23. Toil. Let not Ambition mock their useful toil, El. 29. Heavier toil, superior pain. Inst. 58. various tracts enforce a various toil, E. G. 86. Vast, oh my friends, and difficult the toil Tasso 27. To paint the Hero's Toil, Toiling. Still is the toiling hand of Care: Toilsome. He wound with toilsome march his long array. Bard 11. Told. Had told, . . . there lurk'd ... a Poet, L. S. 43. The prophet of Bethel, we read, told a lie: C. C. 27. fin pretty Dialogue I told Ode 23. Tolls. The Curfew tolls the knell of parting day, El. 1. Tom. Nor cruel Tom, . . . heard. Tomb. His Brother sends him to the tomb. To break the quiet of the tomb? If Mem'ry o'er their Tomb no Trophies raise, El. 38. from the tomb the voice of Nature cries, El. 91. Charity, that glows beyond the tomb. Inst. 50. To-morrow. To-morrow he repairs the golden flood, Bard 137. to-morrow is no more; Prop? 96. Toned. See Deep-toned. Tongue. Cold is Cadwallo's tongue, with courtly tongue refin'd, the frivolous tongue of giddy fame Words that steal from my tongue, my Ear, Won by thy Tongue, Too. sorrow never comes too late, happiness too swiftly flies, Thine Too these golden keys, I well remember too (for I was present) Agr. 60. Think too how oft in weak . . . minds Agr. 72. benefits too great To be repaid, Agr. 74. the Masians too, and those of Egypt, Agr. 115. Cassius; Vetus, too, and Thrasea, Agr. 125. Too poor for a bribe, Char. 1. too proud to importune; Char. 1. Too, too secure in youthful pride, Hoel 5. Before the Goddess' shrine we too, . . . bend, Prop. 1 2. Cat is- Odin 56. Odin 28. Bar d 29. Inst. 82. Agr. 167. Am. Lines 6. Dante 12. Eton 96. Eton 97. P. P. 91. Took 140 Trained Thee too the Muse should consecrate to Fame, Prop? 53. too soon they had aroused 'em Dante 48. f Maggots too will form and nourish; Ode 16. f For, too sure, they love not well. Rond. 24. Took. Holland took the pious resolution View MS. 2. And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. The Master of Pembroke Has from them his system took; Satire 30. he took his stand; Stat} 38. Tooth. Jealousy with rankling tooth, Eton 66. Topped. See Cloud-topped. Torments. If realms beneath those fabled torments know, Prop? 39. Torn. lilies . . . From haughty Gallia torn, Inst. 40. Torrent. With torrent rapture, see it pour; P. P. MS. 11. Torrent's. Sighs to the torrent's aweful voice beneath! Bard 24. the torrent's swift-descending flood, E. G. 93. Had I but the torrent's might, Hoel I. Torrent-stream. The torrent-stream his ancient bounds disdains, Tasso 9. Torrent-tide. Check'd by the torrent-tide of blood, Owen z-j. Torrid. •j- Youth, his torrid Beams thay [that?] plays, Ode it,. Tortoise. Her coat, that with the tortoise vies, Cat 10. Torturing. Whose iron scourge and tort 'ring hour Adv. 3. Toss. yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 20. the nations . . . Their cymbals toss, Stat. 1 57. Tossed. tost On the thorny bed of Pain, Vic. 45. Touch. Pain can touch the Sons of Heav'n ! Odin MS. 48. With damp, cold touch forbid it to aspire, Ign. 21. Another touch, another temper take, E. G. 79. Fix'd by bis touch a lasting essence take; Bent. 6. Toward. The river boil'd beneath, and rush'd toward the Main, Tasso 24. Towards. I saw methought Towards Pisa's Mount, Dante 29. Tower. from yonder ivy-mantled tow'r El. 9. That grim and antique Tower admitted Dante 23. The Tower of Famine hight, Dante 24. Towered. Shew'd him where empire tower'd, Agr. 46. Towering. By acclamations roused, came tow'ring on. Stat. 1 14. Towers. ye antique towers, Eton I. Ye [Grim, MS.] Towers of Julius, London's lasting shame, Bard 87. Ye gothic fanes, and antiquated towers, Ign. 2. your arms shall rase the Tyrian towers, Stat. 1 1 7. It towers to cut the clouds; Stat. 1 49. Town. And all the town rings of his swearing and roaring! C. C. 16. |Thus great R reigns in town, Ch. Cr. 53. Townshend. But left church and state to Charles Townshend Char. 6. Trace. The paths of pleasure trace, Eton 24. The characters of hell to trace. Bard 52. in thy lineaments we trace A Tudor's fire, Inst. 69. Smiles . . . Soft Reflection's hand can trace; Vic. 30. trace Back to it's Source divine Prop? 57. Traced. Thrice he traced the runic rhyme; Odin 22. Track. Her track, . . . Glory pursue, P. P. 63. In yon bright track [clouds, MS.], Bard 103. Tracts. various tracts enforce a various toil, E. G. 86. Tradition. Stung by a . . . vain tradition, Agr. 134. Tragic. fTragick Numbers, buskin'd Strains, Ode 31. Train. See also Serpent-train. Fair Venus' train appear, Spring 2. black Misfortune's baleful train! Eton 57. Thy philosophic Train be there To soften, Adv. 43. Disease, and Sorrow's weeping train, P. P. 44. Welcome, ... To this, thy kindred train, Inst. 68. the train of pleasures Agr. 78. draws his humid train of mud: Ign. 4. So from th' astonish'd stars, her nightly train, Stat. 1 53. Whate'er with copious train its channel fills, _ Tasso S3' A train of mourning Friends attend his Pall, Prop? 97. fQ draws her train along the Drawing-room, Ch. Cr. 50. Train. See Serpent-train. Inst. 8. Trained. to patient valour train'd They guard E. G. 95. Trains 141 Triumphant Trains. •(■but fickle throw my trains . . . into the Fire: Ode 33. Traitor. sink the traitor in his mother's ruin. Agr. 187. Traitor's. the telling may Beget the Traitour's Infamy, Dante 7. Trance. Stout Glo'ster stood aghast in speechless trance: Bard 13. Forgetful of their wintry trance, Vic. n. Or roused by sprightly sounds from out the trance, Prop? 5. Transient. Her rapid wings the transient scene pursue, Ig"- 34- Transitory. See, . . . each transitory thought Bent. 5. Transparent. Transparent birdlime form'd the middle, L. S. 83. Transport. And give to transport P. P. MS. 2. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bar d 1 20. Rapt in celestial transport they: Inst. 18. Traveller. A Traveller, to thee unknown, Odin 37. no Traveller art thou, King of Men, Odin 81. Treachery. that I was ... by Treachery slain, Dante 17. Tread. As the paths of fate we tread, F. S. 29. Nor doubt with me to tread the downward road Tasso 37. Treads. Behind the steps that Misery treads, Vic. 39. Treasures. The bee's collected treasures sweet, Inst. 62. Tree. See also Old-tree. near his fav'rite tree; El. no. No tree is heard to whisper, View 10. Tree's. See Yew-tree's. Treeses. ■{reclined beneath the Tree-zes; Ode 22. Tree-zes. See Treeses. Tremble. Where Angels tremble, while they gaze, P. P. 100. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, Bard 119. tremble at the phantom I have raised? Agr. 86. The theatre's green height and woody wall Tremble Stat? 15. Trembled. how she turn'd pale and trembled; Agr. 9. Earl Goodwin trembled for his neighbouring sand; View 6. Trembling. give to rapture all thy trembling strings. P. P. 2. Shafts . . . Shoot the trembling cords along. F. S. 14. they alike in trembling hope repose, El. 127. The trembling family they daunt, L. S. 57. while he stood trembling, Agr. 31. o'er the trembling Nations from afar E. G. 46. warbles high His trembling thrilling ecstasy; Vic. 14. the champions, trembling at the sight, Prevent disgrace, Stat. 1 22. and in their trembling Flanks Dante 39. and rent his trembling Prey. Dante 84. Tremendous. Hosannas rung through hell's tremendous bor- ders, Toph. 7. Tresses. their flaxen tresses tear, And snowy veils, Odin jj. Tribe. Shame of the versifying tribe! L. S. 18. Tribunal. before His high tribunal thou and I Agr. 144. Tribute. the passing tribute of a sigh. El. 80. The Fields to all their wonted Tribute bear; West 11. Sacred tribute of the bard, Conan 3. Tricks. And filching and lying, and Newgate-bird tricks; C. C. 17. fP, Proteus-like all tricks, . . . can shew, Ch. Cr. 43. Tried. His vigorous arm he tried before he flung, Stat? 6. Tries. While to retain the envious Lawn she tries, Prop? 23. Trifle. fSo I to you this Trifle give, Ode 53. Trim. Some shew their gayly-gilded trim Spring 29. In gallant trim the gilded Vessel goes; Bard 7 3. Trinity. The Master of Trinity To him bears affinity; Satire II. As to Trinity Hall We say nothing at all. Satire 35. Triple. The triple dog that scares the shadowy kind, Prop? 44. Triumph. To triumph, and to die, are mine. Bard 142. Where they triumph, where they die. F. S. 28. Songs of joy and triumph sing! F. S. 54. Triumph to the younger King. F. S. 56. The laurell'd Triumph and the sculptured Carr; Prop? 34. Triumphant. a thousand strains Triumphant tell Bard MS. no. triumphant o'er the vanquish'd world; Ign. 28. Triumphs 142 Twisted Triumphs. Their tears, their little triumphs o'er, Inst. 48. Trod. I trod your level lawn, Inst. 31. yet the dread path once trod, Stanza 2. Against the stream the waves secure he trod, Tasso 15. Nor how the Persian trod the indignant Sea; Prop. 3 38. Trojan. borne By the young Trojan to his . . . bark Agr. 196. Troop. A griesly troop are seen, Eton 82. Troops. Now in circling troops they meet: P. P. 33. On the first marching of the troops L. S. 69. Trophies. If Mem'ry ... no Trophies raise, El. 38. Trouble. Tho' Pope and Spaniard could not trouble it. L. S. 16. Troubled. Stream'd, like a meteor, to the troubled air Bard 20. Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite, Odin 29. Troy. And hates the Tale of Troy Prop. 3 74. True. 'T is true, our master's temper natural Was fashion'd fair Shak. 9. "Ah!" said the sighing peer, "had Bute been true, View 17. True to the mighty arm that gave it force, Stat. 2 11. fBut, I wot, they loved not true. Rond. 8. \True to love, — and then to part, Rond. 9. Trump. say we sound The trump of liberty; Agr. 122. Trumpet's. the trumpet's thrilling voice, Agr. 95. Trust. band, Who trust your arms Stat. 1 17. That I did trust him, that I was betray 'd Dante 16. Trusting. that I was betray'd By trusting, Dante 17. Trusts. trusts her Blossoms to the churlish Skies. E. G. 8. Truth. To her they vow their truth, Adv. 24. Mirrors of Saxon truth and loyalty Bard MS. 71. Truth severe, by fairy Fiction drest. Bard 127. The struggling pangs of conscious truth El. 69. The Sparks of Truth and Happiness E. G. 29. Try. The stings of Falshood those shall try, Eton 75. two youths advance, ... to try the glorious chance; Stat. 1 10. it be my Fate to try Another Love, Prop? 69. Tudor's. in thy lineaments we trace A Tudor's fire, Inst. 70. Tully. Some mute inglorious Tully El. Mas. 59. Tumbled. She tumbled headlong in. Cat 30. Tumult. No Giant Race, no Tumult of the Skies, Prop. 3 35. Tuneful. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. Dear lost companions of my tuneful art, Bar d 39. In silent gaze the tuneful choir among, Bent. 1. Tunes. She tunes my easy Rhime, Prop. 5 6. Turbulent. Where broad and turbulent it grows Vic. 58. Turf. Whose turf, . . . Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 8. Where heaves the turf in many a . . . heap, El. 14. Turn. Where his glowing eye-balls turn, Owen 31. To turn the torrent's . . . flood, E. G. 92. And all its jetty honours turn to snow; Prop? 14. Turned. Decorum's turn'd to mere civility, L. S. 137. how she turn'd pale and trembled: -Agr. 9. But may not honey's self be turn'd to gall Shak. II. His course he turn'd, and thus relieved their care: Tasso 26. Askaunce he turn'd him, Dante 83. Turns. Where'er she turns the Graces homage pay. P. P- 37- Turrets. And bad these awful fanes and turrets rise, Inst. 53. Turrets and arches nodding to their fall, View 14. Twenty. fTwenty more in Embrio dye; Ode 38. Twice. He once or twice had pen'd a sonnet; L. S. 125. Twilight-gloom. The Muse has broke the twilight-gloom P. P. 56. 'Twill. See also Will. 't will profit you, Agr. 12. Twined. Twined with her blushing foe, Bard 92. Twinkling. See Many-twinkling. Twisted. Helm, nor Hauberk's twisted mail, Bard 5. Better be twisted into caps for spice, Shak. 19. Twitcher 143 Unexecuted Twitcher. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. I. I '11 be Mrs. Twitcher myself. C. C. 32. Twittering. The swallow twittering from the straw-built shed, El. 18. Two. Two angel forms were seen to glide, Cat 14. Two Coursers of ethereal race, P. P. 105. Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 12. As the Master of Keys Is as like as two pease, Satire 14. So the Master of Queen's Is as like as two beans; Satire 1 6. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Stat. 1 9. AU but two youths th' enormous orb decline, Stat. 1 24. 'T would. See also Would. 'twould dash his joy Agr. 13. — at our time of life 't would be silly, C. C. 10. Tyrant. Nor even thy virtues, Tyrant, shall avail Bard 6. Horrour, Tyrant of the throbbing breast. Bard 130. The little Tyrant of his fields El. 58. Yet would the Tyrant Love permit me raise Prop? 31. Tyrant-power. Alike they scorn the pomp of tyrant-Power, P. P. 79. Tyrants. And purple Tyrants vainly groan Adv. 7. Tyrian. Their scaly armour's Tyrian hue Cat 16. your arms shall rase the Tyrian towers, Stat. 1 17. Ugolino. Know, thou seest In me Count Ugolino, Dante 13. Ulysses. And scarce Ulysses scap'd his giant arm. Stat? 23. Umbrageous. Fast by th' umbrageous vale lull'd to repose, Prop? 3. Unaccustomed. Nor I with unaccustom'd Vigour trace Prop? 57. Unadorned. low as his feet there flows A vestment unadorn'd, Tasso 14. Unavailing. Ye unavailing horrors, fruitless crimes! Agr. 177. A sigh; an unavailing tear; Clerke 14. Why this unavailing haste? Song 8. Unblessed. Leave me unbless'd, unpitied, here to mourn: Bard 102. with voice unblest, That calls me Odin 35. Unborn. unborn Ages, crowd not on my soul! Bard 108. to shine Thro' every unborn age, Inst. 17. Unborrowed. With orient hues, unborrow'd of the Sun: P. P. 120. Uncertain. The uncertain Crescent gleams a sickly light. Tasso 48. Unclose. Unwilling I my lips unclose: Odin 49. Unclouded. equal Justice with unclouded Face E. G. 15. Uncompleated. See Uncompleted. Uncompleted. But yet in low and uncompleated Sounds Dante 44. Unconquerable. Th' unconquerable Mind, P. P. 65. Uncouth. With uncouth rhimes and shapeless sculpture El. 79. Undaunted. A heart that . . . will mount undaunted, Agr. 52. With eyes of flame, and cool undaunted breast, Williams 9. Undeceived. From hence, ye Beauties, undeceiv'd, Cat 37. Under. Under a tea-cup he might lie, L. S. 67. Have his limbs Sweat under iron harness? Agr. 97. Under the warlike Corbulo, Ag T - II2 - fin vain you think to find them under E, Ch. Cr. 13. Underneath. The Muses, . . . Convey'd him underneath their hoops L. S.ji. Undertook. The Heroines undertook the task, L. S. 53. Undigested. And embryon metals undigested glow, Tasso 58. Undiscovered. to shine thro' every . . . undiscover'd clime. Inst. 17. who can probe the undiscover'd Wound? Prop? 92. Undisturbed. grave and undisturb'd reflection Agr. 82. Unequal. Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Stat. 1 5. Unerring. could they catch . . .his unerring line; Bent. 14. Sure flew the disc from his unerring hand, Stat. 1 39. Unexecuted. waste the . . . hours In threats unexecuted? Agr. 155. Unfading 144 Up Unfading. Let on this head unfadeing flowers reside, Prop? 9. Unfathomed. The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean El. 54. Unfeeling. Th' unfeeling for his own. Eton 94. Unfelt. Tyrants vainly groan With pangs unfelt before, Adv. 8. Unfold. Great things ... in your ears I shall unfold ; Tasso 36. The Bitterness of Death, I shall unfold. Dante 20. Unformed. UnfornTd, unfriended, by those . . . Cares, E. G. 10. Unfriended. Unform'd, unfriended, by those . . . Cares, E. G. 10. Unfurled. with ensigns wide unfurl'd, She rode Ign. 27. Ungrateful. power he has to be ungrateful. -Agr. 81. we may meet, ungrateful boy, we may! Agr. 140. Unguarded. unguarded and without a lictor, Agr. 5. Unhappy. they wept, unhappy Boys! Dante 54. Unheeded. thy judging eye, The flow'r unheeded shall de- scry, Inst. 72. And scornful flung th' unheeded weight Stat. 1 21. Unhonored. mindful of th' unhonour'd Dead, El. 93; Mas. 77. Unhonoured. See Unhonored. Unite. In one rich mass unite the precious store, Tasso 61. Universal. That first, eternal, universal Cause; Prop? 18. Unkindness'. hard Unkindness' alter'd eye, Eton 76. Unknown. And unknown regions dare descry: Eton 37. What call unknown, what charms presume Odin 27. A Traveller, To thee unknown, Odin 37. to Fortune and to Fame unknown. El. 118. Thro'' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, L. S. 54. he liv'd unknown To fame, or fortune, Agr. 39. Oceans unknown, inhospitable Sands! Tasso 32. Happy the Youth, and not unknown to Fame, Prop? 65. To thee and all unknown Dante 19. Unlettered. their years, spelt by th* unletter'd muse, El. 81. Unlock. This can unlock the gates of Joy; P. P. 92. Unmanly. Unmanly Thought! E. G. 72. Unpeopled. Unpeopled monast'ries delude our eyes, View 15. Unpitied. purple Tyrants . . . unpitied and alone. Adv. 8. Leave me unbless'd, unpitied, here to mourn: Bard 102. Unpledged. they are aware Of th' unpledg'd bowl, Agr. 21. Unquenchable. How shall the spark Unquenchable, . . . blaze Agr. 129. Unrelenting. with unrelenting fangs, That tear'st Bard 57. Then with unrelenting Eye Dante 82. Unrequited. benefits . . As unrequited wrongs. Agr. 76. Unresisted. nations own'd her unresisted might, Ign. 29. Unriddle. The words too eager to unriddle, L. S. 81. Unroll. solemn scenes . . . their glitt'ring skirts unroll? Bard 106. Knowledge . . . her ample page ... did ne'er unroll; El. 50. Unseen. many a flower is born to blush unseen, El. 55. There scatter'd oft, ... By Hands unseen El. Pem. 118; Mas. 138. For Ills unseen what Remedy is found ? Prop? 91. Untaught. The untaught harmony of spring: Spring 7. Unthought. Th' unthought event disclose a whiter meaning. Agr. 71. Untimely. from an untimely grave. Clerke MS. 12. Idle notes! untimely green! Song 7. Unto, omitted. Unuttered. The Anguish, that unutter'd nathless wrings Dante 5. Unused. hearts, unus'd to shake When a boy frowns, Agr. 17. Unveil. To Him the mighty Mother did unveil P. P. 86. Unwearied. where unwearied sinews must be found E. G. 90. Unwilling. Unwilling I my lips unclose: Odin 49. tame th' unwilling Deep. E. G. 43. Up, omitted. Upheaved 145 Vast Upheaved. Another orb upheaved his strong right hand, Stat. 1 15. Upland. meet the sun upon the upland lawn. El. 100. Upon, omitted. Uprear. from the dust uprear his reverend head, Agr. 142. Upright. • but hurl'd upright, Emits the mass, Stat. 1 45. Uprose. Uprose the King of Men with speed, Odin I. Upstairs. See Stairs. Upward. Twas the Lark that upward sprung! Song 5. Urge. Or urge the flying ball? Eton 30. Years of havock urge their destined course, Bard 85. And all that Groom could urge against him. L. S. 116. Urien. Brave Urien sleeps upon his craggy bed: Bard 31. Urn. Scatters from her pictur'd urn P. P. 109. Can storied urn or animated bust El. 41. Then to my quiet Urn awhile draw near, Prop? 105. Us, omitted. Used. rhymes that us'd to linger on, Bent. 9. Useful. mock their useful [rustic, Mas.] toil, El. 29. Usurper's. spare the meek Usurper's holy head. Bar d 90. Utterance. At once give loose to Utterance, and to Tears. Dante 9. Vain. How vain the ardour of the Crowd, Spring 18. She stretch'd in vain Cat 22. Ah, fields belov'd in vain, Eton 12. By vain Prosperity received, Adv. 23. has he giv'n in vain the heav'nly Muse? P. P. 48. Mountains, ye mourn in vain Bard 32. with vain tho' kind enquiry El. Mas. no. Stung by ... a vain tradition, Agr. 134. penitence, and vain remorse, Agr. 179. In vain the smileing Mornings shine, West 1. The Birds in vain their amorous Descant joyn; West 3. I . . . weep the more because I weep in vain. West 14. The Soil, . . . will not teem in vain, E. G. 6. draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. Nor Mungo's, Rigby's, Bradshaw's friendship vain, View 18. Nor B— d's promises been vain, View Nich. 18. In vain the nations with officious fear Their cymbals toss, Stat. 1 56. Here Arts are vain, Prop? 85. imploreing In vain my Help, Dante 74. •j-In vain you think to find them under E, Ch. Cr. 13. Vainly. purple Tyrants vainly groan Adv. 7. meaner Beauties . . . vainly ape her art L. 5.28. Move through the Sacred Way and vainly threat, Prop? 52. fVainly enamelling the Green. Ode 18. Vale. in the vale of years beneath Eton 81. thro' each winding vale . . . the notes prolong. F. S. 59. the cool sequester'd vale of life El. 75. The meanest flowret of the vale, Vic. 49. Along the lonely vale of days? Clerke 12. To Cattraeth's vale . . . Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel n. But none from Cattraeth's vale return, Hoel 20. Fast by th' umbrageous vale lull'd to repose, Prop? 3. Vales. Thro' verdant vales, P. P. 9. Insult the plenty of the vales below? E. G. 99. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat? 17. Valor. to patient valour train'd They guard E. G. 94. Valour. See Valor. Van. Amazement in his van, . . . and solitude behind. Bard 61. Vane. Here lives Harry Vane Impr. Vane 1. Vanish. They melt, they vanish from my eyes. Bard 104. Vanquished. triumphant o'er the vanquish'd world; Ign. 28. Varied. Opinion tinge the varied Mind, E. G. 27. Variegated. •(•And variegated Fancy's seen Ode 17. Various. Through various life I have pursued Agr. 54. As various tracts enforce a various toil, E. G. 86. What length of sea remains, what various lands, Tasso 31. All stones . . . mix attemper 'd in a various day; Tasso 66. Varying. In fortune's varying colours drest: Spring 37. Vase's. 'T was on a lofty vase's side, Cat 1. Vast. How vast the debt of gratitude Agr. 57. Vast, oh my friends, and difficult the toil Tasso 27. Who taught this vast machine Prop? 17. Vault 146 View Vault. through the long-drawn isle and fretted vault El. 39. Vaulted. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop? 47. Veil. clouds of carnage veil the sun. F. S. Whar. 50. Oped the dark Veil of Fate. Dante 28. Veiled. they . . . veil'd their weapons bright and keen L. S. 39. Veils. snowy veils, that float in air. Odin 78. Veins. this fires the veins, Eton 85. fill their verdant Veins. E. G. 4. Sulphureous veins and liveing silver shine, Tasso 59. Velvet. The velvet of her paws, Cat 9. Velvet-green. O'er Idalia's velvet-green P. P. 27. Venal. she ... no venal incense flings; Inst. 79. Old, and abandon'd by each venal friend, View 1. Venerable. Foremost . . . The venerable Marg'ret see! Inst. 66. Vengeance. Stamp we our vengeance deep, Bard 96. In lieu of penitence, . . . Accept my vengeance. Agr. 180. Vengeful. Not circled with the vengeful Band Adv. 36. Ventured. Thro' lanes unknown, o'er stiles they ventur'd, L. S. 54 . Venus'. Fair Venus' train appear, Spring 2. Verdant. Thro' verdant vales, P. P. 9. fill their verdant Veins. E. G. 4. Here the soft emerald smiles of verdant hue, Tasso 67. Verdure. From his broad bosom life and verdure flings E. G. 102. Verge. The slipp'ry verge her feet beguil'd, Cat 29. Give ample room, and verge enough Bard 51. Vermeil-cheek. With vermeil-cheek . . . She woo's the tardy spring: Vic$. Vernal. Richly paint the vernal year: P. P. 90. Sweet is the breath of vernal shower, Inst. 61. blast the vernal Promise of the Year. E. G. 21. There bloom the vernal rose's earliest pride; Prop? 10. Verse. The verse adorn again Fierce War, Bard 125. The thrilling verse that wakes the Dead; Odin 24. Build to him the lofty verse, Conan 2. Verse, the hero's sole reward. Conan 4. Whence the soft Strain and ever-melting Verse? Prop? 2. No Mountain-Structures in my Verse should rise, Prop? 36. A milder Warfare I in Verse display; Prop? 61. A little Verse my All that shall remain; Prop? 101. f If heroic Verse I 'm reading Ode 26. Versifying. Shame of the versifying tribe! L. 5. 18. Very. What, in the very first beginning! L. S. 17. The very power he has Agr. 81. No very great wit, Char. 4. Very good claret and fine Champaign. Impr. Vane 2. Vessel. In gallant trim the gilded Vessel goes; Bard 73. And parting surges round the vessel roar; Stat. 2 21. Vestment. low as his feet there flows A vestment unadorn'd, Tasso 14. Vetus. Vetus too, and Thrasea, Agr. 125. Vice. Vice, that revels in her chains. P. P. 80. Victim. the Victim of her Scorn, Prop? 77. Victims. The little victims play ! Eton 52. ye manes of ambition's victims, Agr. 174. Victor. Mighty Victor, mighty Lord ! Bar d 63. Victor he stood on Bellisle's rocky steeps — Williams 10. A tiger's pride the victor bore away, Stat? 24. Victorious. Joy to the victorious bands; F. S. 55. Victor's. to sound the Victor's Praise, Prop? 32. Victors. fair befall the victors. Agr. 153. Victory. 'T is the woof of victory. F. S. 20. The orb . . . joys to see Its ancient lord secure of victory. Stat? 13. Vies. Her coat, that with the tortoise vies, Cat 10. View. To the view . . . Betray'd a golden gleam, Cat 17. Your helpless, old, expiring master view ! Bard MS. 72. bring the buried ages back to view. Ign. 35. Approaching Comfort view: Vic. 40. Viewed 147 Voluntary Nor envy dar'd to view him with a frown. Williams 4. Far better scenes than these had blest our view, View 19. Pisa's Mount, that intercepts the View Of Lucca, Dante 29. "fSee Isaac, Joseph, Jacob, pass in view; Ch. Cr. 26. fAnd brings all Womankind before your view; Ch. Cr. 59. Viewed. p Of many a flood they view'd the secret source, Tasso 51 Vigils. Industry and Gain their Vigils keep, E. G. 42 Vigor. And lively chear of vigour bom; Eton 47 Cares, That Health and Vigour . . . impart, E.G. 11 See the Wretch, ... At length repair his vigour lost, Vic. 47 Nor I with unaccustom'd Vigour trace Prop. 3 57 Vigorous. His vigorous arm he tried before he flung, Stat. 2 6. vigorous he seem'd in years, Tasso 12. Vigour. See Vigor. Village-Cato. Some Village-Cato, El. Mas. 57. Village-Hampden. Some village-Hampden [-Hambden, Pern.] El. 57. Village-maid. Swift shoots the Village-maid in rustic play Tasso 19. Vindicate. Redeem, what Crassus lost, and vindicate his name. Prop. 2 54. Vintage. quaff the pendent Vintage as it grows. E. G. 57. Violet. Ah! what means yon violet flower! Song 3. Violets. Scatter'd oft . . . are Show'rs of Violets El. Pem. 118; Mas. 138. Virgin-grace. Attemper'd sweet to virgin-grace. Bar d 118. Virgins. What Virgins these, . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 75. Virtue, thy Sire to send on earth Virtue, . . . design 'd, Adv. 10. Must sick'ning virtue fly the tainted ground? E.G. 71. Virtues. Nor even thy virtues, Tyrant, shall avail Bard 6. nor circumscrib'd alone Their growing virtues, El. 66. within whose sacred cell The peaceful virtues . . . dwell. Clerke 4. Visage. Nor wash his visage in the stream, Odin 67. Visaged. See Grim-visaged. Visages. Sour visages, enough to scare ye, L. S. 106. Viscountess. Why, what can the Viscountess mean?L. S. 134. Visionary. Before his visionary eyes would run. P. P. MS. 118. Visions. Visions of glory, spare my aching sight, Bard 107. Visits. Dear, as the light that visits these sad eyes, Bard 40. Vital. draw Mankind in vain the vital Airs, E. G. 9. Vitals. Those in the deeper vitals rage: Eton 87. Vivid. All stones of lustre shoot their vivid ray, Tasso 65. What colours paint the vivid arch of Jove; Prop? 29. Vocal. Vocal no more, since Cambria's fatal day, Bard 27. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bard 120. Voice. They hear a voice Eton 39. With thund'ring voice, and threat'ning mien, Adv. 38. Thee the voice, the dance, obey, P. P. 25. but to the voice of Anguish? P. P. 72. Sighs to the torrent's aweful voice beneath! Bard 24. A Voice, . . . Gales from blooming Eden bear; Bard 131. What voice unknown, Odin MS. 27. Who is he [this, Whar.], with voice unblest, That calls me Odin 35. Can Honour's voice provoke the silent dust? El. 43. from the tomb the voice of Nature cries, El. 91. sweeter yet The still small voice of gratitude. Inst. 64. While spirits . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 88. the trumpet's thrilling voice, Agr. 95. ears to own Her spirit-stirring voice; Agr. 124. If . . . my voice ye hear, Agr. 178. permit me raise My feeble Voice, Prop? 32. Volumes. Of the dear Web whole Volumes I indite: Prop? 12. Voluntary. obsequious vows From voluntary realms, Agr. 36. At Aix, his voluntary sword he drew, Williams 5. Votaries 14S Wantons Votaries. we too, love's vot'ries, bend, Prop} 2. Vow. To her they vow their truth, Adv. 24. Vows. obsequious vows From voluntary realms, Agr. 35. Vulgar. Beyond the limits of a vulgar fate, P. P. 122. she No vulgar praise, . . . flings, Inst. 79. Vulture. Or drive the infernal Vulture Prop. 3 90. Vultures. The vulturs of the mind, Eton 62. Vulturs. See Vultures. W. fSo big with Weddings, waddles W, Ch. Cr. 58. Waddles. fSo big with Weddings, waddles W, Ch. Cr. 58. Wade. Forbad to wade through slaughter El. 67. Wading. Wading through th' ensanguin'd field, F. S. 30. Wage. Wars . . . with Cynthia let me wage. Prop. 1 4. Waggon. See Wagon. Wagon. And what Bootes' lazy waggon tires; Prop? 36. Wail. I heard 'em wail for Bread. Dante 45. Wait. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. Confusion on thy banners wait, Bard 2. What Terrors round him wait! Bard 60. pleasures That wait on youth, Agr. 79. •j-Queer Queensbury only does refuse to wait. Ch. Cr. 52. Waits. Lo! Granta waits to lead her blooming band, Inst. 77. Wake. And wake the purple year! Spring 4. Awake, my lyre: my glory, wake, P. P. MS. 1. No more shall wake them from their lowly Bed. El. Dods. 20. might serve belike to wake pretensions Agr. 103. Waked. Hands, that . . . wak'd to extasy the living lyre. El. 48. Wakeful. the dazzled sight Of wakeful jealousy. Agr. 192. Wakes. what daring Spirit Wakes thee now? P. P. 113. The thrilling verse that wakes the Dead: Odin 24. Bright Rapture wakes, Bard Lett. 2 123. Waking. Divinity heard, between waking and dozing, C. C. 19. Walk. Nor Envy . . . Dare the Muse's walk to stain, Inst. 10. And breathe and walk again: Vic. 48. Walks. linger in the gloomy Walks of Fate: El. Mas. 80. the spirit of Britannicus Yet walks on earth: Agr. 15. To-day the Lover walks, Prop? 96. Wall. The theatre's green height and woody wall Tremble Stat? 14. Wallows. Boar . . . Wallows beneath the thorny shade. Bard 94. Walls. from Pomfret's walls shalt send Bar d Lett. 1 75. within the spatious walls, ... he ... led the Brawls; L. S. 9. much I hope these walls alone Agr. 22. hated walls that seem to mock my shame, Agr. 156. Then had we seen proud London's hated walls; View 22. And batter Cadmus' walls with stony showers, Stat. 1 18. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. •(•The walls of old Jerusalem appear, Ch. Cr. 27. Wan. See also Woeful-wan. Envy wan, and faded Care, Eton 68. Her Spectres wan, and Birds of boding cry, P. P. 50. drooping, woeful wan, like one forlorn, El. Dods. 107. with weakly Gleam, And wan, Dante 60. Wandering. Not all that tempts your wand'ring eyes Cat 40. wand'ring near her secret bow'r, El. 11. Wanders. Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 9. Waning. That monthly waning hides her paly fires, Prop? 20. Want. there will not want, . . . ears to own Agr. 122. The rough abode of want and liberty, E. G. 97. Wanted. •f-Still to ripen 'em is wanted; Ode 4. Wanton. had her wanton son Lent us his wings, Agr. 189. Wantonness. |With Woe behind, and Wantonness before. Ch. Cr. 61. Wantons. The gilded swarm that wantons Agr. 147. And sports and wantons o'er the frozen tide. Tasso 22. Wants 149 Wave Wants. Their little wants, their low desires refine, E. G. 82. War. on Thracia's hills the Lord of War P. P. 17. glitt'ring shafts of war. P. P. 53 ; MS. 52. Fierce War, and faithful Love, Bard 126. Weave the crimson web of war F. S. 25, 36. Norman sails afar . . . join the war: Owen 16. He heard the distant din of war. L. S. 76. ' the glittering front of war? Agr. 94. Scythia breath'd the living Cloud of War; E. G. 47. steel our hearts to war? E. G. 69. And, clash'd, rebellows with the din of war. Stat. 1 !!. the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop. 2 26. To paint ... the Ranks of War, Prop? 33. and send again to War; Prop? 82. Warble. The Red-breast loves to build[,] and [&] warble there, EL Pern. 119 ; Mas. 139. Warbled. Temper 'd to thy warbled lay. P. P. 26. Warbler. The Attic warbler pours her throat, Spring 5. Warbles. But chief, the Sky-lark warbles high Vic. 13. Where Aganippe warbles as it flows; Prop? 4. Warblings. distant warblings lessen on my ear, Bard 133. as the choral warblings round him swell, Inst. 24. Warfare. A milder Warfare I in Verse display; Prop? 61. Warlike. Under the warlike Corbulo, Agr. 112. Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25. Ye Argive flower, ye warlike band, Stat} 16. Warm. Warm Charity, the gen'ral Friend, Adv. 30. O'er her warm cheek, and rising bosom, P. P. 40. Dear, as the ruddy drops that warm my heart, Bard 41. Left the warm precincts of the . . . day, El. 87. To warm their little Loves the Birds complain: West 12. warm the opening Heart. E. G. 12. Affection warm, and faith sincere, . . . were there. Clerke 5. Suspends the crowd with expectation warm; Stat. 1 44. Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. Warms. warms the nations with redoubled ray. Bard 138. Warmth. Nor genial Warmth, nor genial Juice E. G. 3. Warned. By Phlegyas warn'd, and fir'd by Mnestheus' fate, Stat? 4. Warp. Weave the warp, and weave the woof, Bard 49. the loom, Where the dusky warp we strain, F. S. 6. Warrior. Is the sable Warriour fled ? Bar d 67. Warrior's. Each a gasping Warriour's head. F. S. 12. he that calls, a Warriour's Son. Odin 38. Every warrior's manly neck Chains of regal honour deck, Hoel 13. Warriors. Prostrate warriors gnaw the ground. Owen 30. issues A brace of Warriors, not in buff, L. S. 23. Thrice two hundred warriors go: Hoel 12. Warriors'. before the warriors' eyes . . . the waves dis- parted rise; Tasso 39. Wars. Wars hand to hand with Cynthia let me wage. Prop. 1 4. Wary. Then, with a tempest whirl, and wary eye, Stat? 8. Was, omitted. Wash. See also White-wash. Nor wash his visage in the stream, Odin 67. Waste. pineing Love shall waste their youth, Eton 65. waste its sweetness on the desert air. El. 56. why do I waste the fruitless hours Agr. 154. song-thrush . . . Scatters his loose notes in the waste of air. Birds 2. Each in his proper Art should waste the Day: Prop? 62. Watches. While bright-eyed Science watches round: Inst. 1 1. Watchful. With watchful eye and dauntless mien, Inst. 90. Water's. Beside some water's rushy brink Spring 15. Watery. She mew'd to ev'ry watry God, Cat 32. towers, That crown the watry glade, Eton 2. Lochlin plows the watry way; Owen 14. broods o'er Egypt with his wat'ry wings, E. G. 103. The watery glimmerings of a fainter day Tasso 45. Wave. Who . . . delight to cleave . . . thy glassy wave? Eton 26. Woods, that wave o'er Delphi's steep, P. P. 66. thrir hundred arms thry wave, Bard 25. And there the ensanguined Wave of Sicily, Prop? 44> Waves 150 Welcome Waves. Or where Maeander's amber waves P. P. 69. Rapture . . . Waves in the eye of Heav'n Bard 124. Thro' the wild waves as they roar, Inst. 89. Morn . . . Waves her dew-bespangled wing, Vic. 2. Scarce the hoarse waves from far were heard to roar, Tasso 6. Against the stream the waves secure he trod, Tasso 15. When mountain-high the waves disparted rise; Tasso 40. Waving. As waving fresh their gladsome wing, Eton 17. Way. See also Church-way, Sacred Way. Wanders the . . . Thames along His silver- winding way: Eton 10. she wins her easy way: P. P. 39. Yet shall he mount, and keep his distant way P. P. 121. thro' the kindred squadrons mow their way. Bard 86. Onward still his way he takes Odin 13. Lochlin plows the watry way; Owen 14. The plowman homeward plods his weary way, E/.3. They kept the noiseless tenor of their way. El. 76. Yet on his way ... he prefer'd his case, L. S. 89. shades, that . . . blacken round our weary way, Vic. 35. through the skies Sings in its rapid way, Stat. 1 50. To tempt the dangers of the doubtful way; Tasso 2. Swift shoots the Village-maid . . . adown the shining way, Tasso 20. Discover'd half, and half conceal'd their way; Tasso 46. Ways. Then let me rightly spell of nature's ways; Prop. 2 15. Wayward. Join the wayward work to aid: F. S. 19. Mutt 'ring his wayward fancies El. 106. We, omitted. Weak. how oft in weak and sickly minds Agr. 72. Weakly. Till a new Sun arose with weakly Gleam, Dante 59. Wealth. all that wealth e'er gave, El. 34. Alone in nature's wealth array'd, Hoel 9. Weapons. they . . . veil'd their weapons bright and keen L. S. 39. Wear. Thy form benign, oh Goddess, wear, Adv. 41. Wearied. See Time-wearied. Weary. My weary soul they seem to sooth, Eton 18. Who thus afflicts a weary sprite, Odin MS. 29. Now my weary lips I close; [:] Odin 57, 71. The plowman homeward plods his weary way, El. 3- shades, that . . . blacken round our weary way, Vic. 35. Weave. And weave with bloody hands Bard 48. Weave the warp, and weave the woof, Bardefi. Weave we the woof. Bard 98. Weave the crimson web of war[.] F. S. 25, 36. Sisters, weave the web of death; F. S. 51. And with her Garlands weave Prop. 3 54. Weaving. Weaving many a Soldier's doom, F. S. 7. Web. The web is wove. Bard 100. Weave the crimson web of war F. S. 25, 36. Sisters, weave the web of death: F. S. 51. If the thin Coan Web her Shape reveal, Prop. 3 9. Of the dear Web whole Volumes I indite: Prop. 3 12. Weddell. Weddell attends your call, Com. Lines 1. Weddings. •j-So big with Weddings, waddles W, Ch. Cr. 58. Weed. ■(■careless spares to weed the Plain: Ode 10. Weep. No more I weep. Bard^. Long his loss shall Eirin weep, F. S. 45. I . . . weep the more because I weep in vain. West 14. And I, . . . That live to weep . . . their fall. Hoel 24. To weep without knowing the cause of my an- guish: Am. Lines 2. oh ! if thou weep not now, Dante 47. Weeping. Disease, and Sorrow's weeping train, P. P. 44. weeping I forsook thy fond embrace. Ign. 12. Weeps. where the silent marble weeps, ... a mother sleeps: Gierke I. Where melancholy friendship bends, and weeps. Williams 12. Weight. And furthest send its weight Stat. 1 2. A slipp'ry weight, and form'd of polish'd brass. Stat 1 8. and scornful flung th' unheeded weight Stat. 1 21. Then grasp'd its weight, Stat. 1 42. Artful and strong he pois'd the well-known weight Stat. 2 3. Weights, and the weights, that play below, F. S. 11. To judge of weights and measures; Agr. 41. Welcome. Welcome, my noble son, Inst. 67. Well 151 When Well. 'T is 'well, begone! -Agr. I Go! you can paint it well Agr. 12 I well remember too -Agr. 60, She eyes the clear chrystalline well, Vic. 55 f For, too sure, they love not well. Rond. 24 \Well to love, — and then to part, Rond. 25 Well-known. Artful and strong he pois'd the well-known weight St-at. 2 3. Wench. |A Wench, a Wife, a Widow, and a Whore, Ch. Cr. 60. Wenching. What a pother is here about wenching and roar- ing! C. C. 23. Went. He went, as if the Devil drove him. L. S. 88. A wooing he went, C. C. 3. Through subterraneous passages they went, Tasso 49. Wept. Chatillon . . . That wept her bleeding Love, Inst. 42. Speechless my Sight I fix'd, nor wept, Dante 53. they wept, unhappy Boys! Dante 54. They wept, and first my little dear Anselmo Cried, Dante 55. yet wept I not, or answer'd Dante 57. Were, omitted. West. In the caverns of the west, Odin 63. Western. bright track, that fires the western skies, Bard 103. Western gales . . . Speak not always winter past. Song 9. What. What female heart can gold despise? Cat 23. What Cat's averse to fish? Cat 24. What sorrow was, thou bad'st her know, Adv. 15. What others are, to feel, Adv. 48. What idle progeny succeed Eton 28. Man's feeble race what Ills await, P. P. 42. What time, where lucid Avon stray'd, P. P. 85. what daring Spirit Wakes thee P. P. 112. What Terrors round him wait! Bard 60. What pitying eye, what heart, afford A tear Bard MS. 65. what solemn scenes on Snowdon's height Bard 105. What strings symphonious tremble in the air, Bard 119. What strains of vocal transport round her play. Bard 1 20. What call unknown, what charms Odin 27. Tell me what is done below, Odin 40. What dangers Odin"s Child await, Odin 53. What Virgins these, . . . That bend to earth their solemn brow, Odin 75. What, in the very first beginning! L. S. 17. Why, what can the Viscountess mean? L. S. 134. What is grandeur, what is power? Inst. 57. What the bright reward we gain? Inst. 59. What if you add, how she turn'd pale Agr. 9. no matter What; so 't be strange, Agr. 171. thro' Ages by what Fate confin'd E. G. 38. what seasons can control, . . . the soul, E. G. 72. What fancied Zone can circumscribe E. G. 73. What wonder, if to patient valour train'd E. G. 94. They guard with spirit what . . . they gain'd ? E. G. 95. What wonder in the sultry climes, E. G. 100. Whom what awaits, Gierke u. What a pother is here C. C. 23. But what awaits me now is worst of all. Shak. 8. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. Ah! what means yon violet flower! Song 3. What length of sea remains, what various lands, Tasso 31. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop. 2 19. What colours paint the vivid arch of Jove; Prop} 29. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop. 2 30. And what Bootes' lazy waggon tires; Prop. 2 36. Redeem, what Crassus lost, Prop. 2 54. And sing with what a careless Grace she flings Prop. 3 15. For Ills unseen what Remedy is found? Prop. 3 91. nor on what Errand Sent hither: Dante 10. what scant Light That . . . Tower admitted Dante 22. to think, what my poor Heart Foresaw, Dante 46. What would you have ? yet wept I not, Dante 57. Take back, what once was yours. Dante 68. The fourth, what Sorrow could not, Hunger did. Dante 81. ■(Then to sever what is bound, Rond. 31. "("What Ease and Elegance her person grace, Ch. Cr. 7. Whate'er. Whate'er the frivolous tongue . . . Has spread Agr. 167. In brief whate'er she do, or say, or look, Prop. 3 27. Whate'er with copious train its channel fills, Tasso C3. Wheel. The pendent rock, Ixion's whirling wheel, Prop. 2 46. Wheels. Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, El. 7. When. Less pleasing when possest; Eton 42. When first thy Sire to send en earth Virtue, . . . design 'd, Adv. 9. When Latium had her lofty spirit lost, P. P. 81. Yet when they first were open'd P. P. MS. 118. the night, When Severn shall re-eccho Bard 54. Whence 152 Where When he had fifty winters o'er him, L. S. 10. When he the solemn hall had seen; L. S. 118. When a boy frowns, Agr. 18. when yet a stranger To adoration, Agr. 33. when I Oped his young eye -Agr. 44. When in a secret and dead hour Agr. 61. Ev'n when its will seem'd wrote Agr. 70. when the idle herd . . . yet will start, Agr. 130. but when, extends Beyond their chronicle — Agr. 137. When love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. when conspiring in the diamond's blaze, Bent. 21. And scorn'd repose when Britain took the field. Williams 8. When sly Jemmy Twitcher had smugg'd up his face, C. C. 1. When she died, I can't tell, C. C. 14. When thou hear'st the organ piping shrill Shak. 15. To close my dull eyes when I see it returning; Am. Lines 4. Thyrsis, when we parted, swore Song 1. When you rise from your Dinner as light as be- fore, Couplet 1. When blazing 'gainst the sun it shines from far, Stat. 1 30. As when from ./Etna's smoking summit broke, Stat. 2 18. When thwart the road a River roll'd its flood Tasso 7. when lo! appears The wondrous Sage: Tasso II. As on the Rhine, when Boreas' fury reigns, Tasso 17. When mountain-high the waves disparted rise; Tasso 40. As when athwart the dusky woods by night Tasso 47. And when, . . . Age step 'twixt love and me, Prop. 2 11. When my changed head these locks no more shall know, Prop. 2 13. When Pindus' self approaching ruin dreads, Prop. 2 31. When, less averse, and yielding to Desires, Prop? 21. When then my Fates Prop. 3 99. and when she frown'd, he died. Prop? 108. The Morn had scarce commenc'd, when I awoke: Dante 41. when at the Gate Below I heard Dante 50. when I beheld My Sons, Dante 61. When Gaddo, at my Feet out-stretch'd, Dante 73. tFirst when Pastorals I read, Ode 19. ■(•But when once the potent dart Rond. 29. Whence. Tell me, whence their sorrows rose: Odin 79. Say from whence their sorrows rose: Odin MS. 79. House . . . From whence one fatal morning is- sues L. S. 22. the source from whence she springs, E. G. 74. Near the source whence Pleasure flows; Fie. 54. And whence, . . . Relumes her crescent Orb Prop. 2 21. And whence the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop. 2 25. Whence the seven Sisters' congregated fires, Prop. 2 35. Whence the soft Strain and ever-melting Verse? Prop. 3 2. Where. Lo! where the rosy-bosom'd Hours, Spring 1. Where China's ... art had dy'd Cat 2. Where grateful Science still adores Eton 3. Where once my careless childhood stray'd, Eton 13. shew them where in ambush stand Eton 58. where ignorance is bliss, Eton 99. Where shaggy forms . . . roam, P. P. 55. Or where Maeander's amber waves P. P. 69. Where each old poetic Mountain P. P. 73. where lucid Avon stray'd, P. P. 85. Where Angels tremble, while they gaze, P. P. 100. where Dryden's less presumptuous car, P. P. 103. the loom, Where the dusky warp we strain, F. S. 6. Where our Friends the conflict share, F. S. 27. Where they triumph, where they die. F. S. 28. Where long of yore to sleep was laid Odin 19. Where his glowing eye-balls turn, Owen 31. Where he points his purple spear, Owen 33. Save where the beetle wheels his droning flight, El. 7. Where heaves the turf in many a mould'ring heap, El. 14. Where through the long-drawn isle El. 39. In Britain's Isle, no matter where, L. S. I. Where, . . . He heard the distant din of war. L. S. 75. where on their opening soul First . . . ardour stole. Inst. 21. Where willowy Camus lingers with delight! Inst. 29. Shew'd him where empire tower'd, Agr. 46. Where he so soon may — Agr. 165. Where rushy Camus' slowly-winding flood h n - 3- Climes, where Winter holds his Reign, E. G. 5. where the rolling Orb, that gives the Day, E. G. 23. where the deluge burst, with sweepy sway E. G. 48. where the face of nature laughs around, E. G. 70. where unwearied sinews must be found E. G. 90. Where Nile redundant o'er his Summer-bed E. G. 101. where rosy Pleasure leads, Vic. 37. Where broad and turbulent it grows Vic. 58. Mark where Indolence and Pride, Vic. 61. Lo! where the silent marble weeps, . . . a mother sleeps: Clerke 1. Where melancholy friendship bends, and weeps. Williams 12. where three sisters of old In harmless society guttle C. C. 3. Where'er 153 White-wash Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand Stat. 1 38 Where Ocean frets beneath the dashing oar, Stat? 20 Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25 Further they pass, where ripening minerals flow, Tasso 57 Where Aganippe warbles as it flows; Prop? 4 Where he th' eternal fountains of the deep, Prop. 2 24 if thou weep not now, Where are thy Tears? Dante 48 Where'er. Where'er the oak's thick branches stretch Spring II. Where'er the . . . beech O'er-canopies the glade; Spring 13. Where'er she turns the Graces homage pay. P. P. 37. where'er the Goddess roves, P. P. 63. Whether. Whether she fear'd, or wish'd to be pursued. Agr. 199. Which. The captive linnet which enthral? Eton 27. gratitude which Nero . . . owes; Agr. 57. And realis'd the beauties which we feign: View 20. a bad face which did sadly molest her. Mrs. Keene 2. silver . . . Which soon the parent sun's warm powers refine, Tasso 60. Lips, which on the clotter'd Locks ... he wiped, Dante 2. That which yet remains ... I shall unfold. Dante 18. For Anguish, which they construed Hunger; Dante 64. While. See also Awhile. While whisp'ring pleasure as they fly, Spring 8. We frolick, while 't is May. Spring 50. While some on earnest business bent Eton 31. Where Angels tremble, while they gaze, P. P. 100. While proudly riding o'er the azure realm Bard 72. While . . . Foam and human gore distill'd: Odin 7. While, . . . Prostrate warriors gnaw the ground. Owen 29. While o'er the Heath we hied, El. Mas. 118. While bright-eyed Science watches round: Inst. 11. While spirits blest . . . Join with glad voice Inst. 87. while he stood trembling, Agr.-^i. While mutual Wishes, mutual Woes endear E. G. 36. While European Freedom still withstands E. G. 60. while their rocky ramparts round they see, E. G. 96. While Bentley leads her sister-art along, Bent. 3. While Hope prolongs our happier hour, Vic. 33. while yet he strays Along the . . . vale Clerke 11. While Nancy earns the praise to Shakespeare due, Shak. 23. While frighted prelates bow'd Toph. 2. and while they wished him dead, Toph. 3. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat. 2 17. While to retain the envious Lawn she tries, Prop. 3 23. Then, while the vaulted Skies loud Ios rend, Prop. 3 47. While Prows, that late in fierce Encounter mett, Prop. 3 51. while o'er the Place You drop the Tear, Prop. 3 106. He lived, while she was kind; Prop? 108. •{•while different far, Rests in Retirement, Ch. Cr. 53. Whilst, the whilst I slumb'ring lay, Dante 26. Whirl. Then whirl the wretch from high, Eton 72. Then, with a tempest whirl, and wary eye, Stat? 8. Whirling. The pendent rock, Ixion's whirling wheel, Prop? 46. Whirlwind. And up stairs in a whirlwind rattle. L. S. 60. Saw the snowy whirlwind fly; Vic. 22. As the whirlwind in its course; Conan 6. Whirlwind's. Regardless of the sweeping Whirlwind's sway, Bar d 75. Whisk. Out of the window, whisk, they flew, L. S. 79, Whisker. A whisker first and then a claw, Cat 20. Whisper. With . . . whisper soft She woo's the tardy spring: Vic. 3. No tree is heaid to whisper, View 10. Whispered. things, that but whisper'd Have arch'd Agr. 168. Whispering. whisp'ring pleasure as they fly, Spring 8. In still small Accents whisp'ring El. Mas. 83. Whistful. See Wistful. White. So her white neck reclin'd, Agr. 195. A vestment unadorn'd, though white as new- fal'n Snows; Tasso 14. Whiter. Th' unthought event disclose a whiter meaning. Agr. 71. White-wash. With a lick of court white-wash, and pious grimace, C. C. 2. Whither 154 Wife Whither. Your Hist'ry whither are you spinning? L. S. Who. Who foremost now delight to cleave Eton who o'er thy country hangs The scourge Heav'n. Bard Who thus afflicts my troubled sprite, Odin Who is he, . . . That calls me Odin say, . . . Who the Author of his fate. Odin say, Who th' Avenger of his guilt, Odin Who ne'er shall comb his raven-hair, Odin Who their flaxen tresses tear Odin MS. who to dumb Forgetfulness a prey, El. thee, who mindful El. 93; Mas. Alas, who would not wish to please her! L. S. Imp . . . Who prowl'd the country L. S. Who will, believe. L. S. at least there are who know Agr. your servant's fears, who sees the danger Agr. the rest is heav'n's; who oft has bade, Agr. one Who had such liberal power Agr. theirs, who boast the genuine blood Agr. 1 the soul, Who conscious of the source E. G. who could not save His all Gierke MS. band, Who trust your arms Stat. 1 to Him . . . Who taught this vast machine Pro P\ Who measured out the year, Prop? who can probe the undiscover'd Wound? Prop? I know not, who thou art; Dante tThey who just have felt the flame Rond. '9- 2 5- of 59- 29. 35- 54- 61. 66. 77- 85. 77- 36. 45- 73- J 5- 24. 69. 89. 04. 74- 11. 17- 17- 38. 92. 10. 21. Whoe'er. Whoe'er the quoit can wield, Stat. 1 1. Whole. Of the dear Web whole Volumes I indite: Prop? 12. All that whole Day, or the succeeding Night Dante 58. Whom. They, whom once the desart-beach Pent F. S. 37. For whom yon glitt'ring board is spread, Odin 41. Drest for whom yon golden bed. Odin 42. By whom shall Hoder"s blood be spilt? Odin 62. Whom meaner Beauties eye askance, L. S. 27. The few, whom genius gave to shine Inst. 16. Whom what awaits, Clerke 11. the Traitour's Infamy, whom thus I ceaseless gnaw Dante 7. Whore. +A Wench, a Wife, a Widow, and a Whore, Ch. Cr. 60. Whoring. They say he 's no Christian, loves drinking and whoring, C. C. 15. Why, David lov'd catches, and Solomon whoring: C. C. 24. Whose. Whose turf . . . among Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 8. whose shade . . . among Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 8. Ode 54. Eton 95. L. S. 134. Agr. 154. Agr. 164. whose flowers among Wanders the hoary Thames along Eton 8. Whose iron scourge and tort 'ring hour Adv. 3. This pencil . . . whose colours clear P. P. 89. a rock, whose haughty brow Frowns Bard 15. Modred, whose magic song Made huge Plinlim- mon bow Bard 33. thee, whose influence breathed from high Ign.7. Whose flinty Bosom starves her generous Birth, E. G. 2. A heart, within whose sacred cell Clerke 3. Whose walls along the neighbouring Sea extend, Tasso 4. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame Prop? 53. Whose heart has never felt a second flame. Prop? 66. •f-Whose influence first bid it live. Why. why should they know their fate? Why, what can the Viscountess mean? why do I waste the fruitless hours Why then stays my sovereign, Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59. Why, David lov'd catches, C. C. 24. Why this unavailing haste? Song 8. Why does yon Orb, . . . Obscure his radiance Prop? 33. You ask, why thus my Loves I still rehearse, Prop? 1. Father, why, why do you gaze so sternly? Dante 56. j-But why on such mock grandeur should we dwell, Ch. Cr. 23. Wicked. lurk'd A wicked Imp they call a Poet, L. S. 44. If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Shak. 13. Wide. Wide o'er the fields of Glory P. P. 104. Far and wide the notes prolong. F. S. 60. His shaggy throat he open'd wide, Odin 6. with ensigns wide unfurl'd, She rode Ign. 27. Widest. Where flow'd the widest stream he took his stand, Stat? 38. Widow. The Widow feels thee in her aching hip; Com. Lines 6. +A Wench, a Wife, a Widow, and a Whore, Ch. Cr. 60. Wield. Each her thundering faulchion wield; F. S. 62. Whoe'er the quoit can wield, Stat? 1. Wife. long rever'd ... the daughter, sister, wife, Agr. 118. A friend, a wife, a mother sleeps: Clerke 2. — but he once had a wife; C. C. 14. fA Wench, a Wife, a Widow, and a Whore, Ch. Cr. 60. Wild 155 Wintry Wild. Theirs . . . wild wit, Eton 46. moody Madness laughing wild Eton 79. Wild Laughter, Noise, and thoughtless Joy, Adv. 19. the sounds, that . . . scatter'd wild dismay, Bard 10. With Horror wild, Bard Lett. 2 130. There . . . Conflict fierce, and Ruin wild, Owen 38. Thro' the wild waves Inst. 89. With headlong rage and wild affright Hoel 2. Wildly. In loose numbers wildly sweet P. P. 61. Their raptures now that wildly flow, No . . . morrow know; Vic. 25. Will. its will seem'd wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Shak. 13. Will, vb. See also I '11, Nill, 'T will, You '11. Who will, believe. L. S. 73. That will he, nill he, . . . He went, L. S. 87. A heart that . . . will mount undaunted, Agr. 52. there will not want, . . . ears to own Agr. 122. the idle herd . . . yet will start, -Agr. 132. ere mid-day, Nero will come to Baiae. Agr. 159. I will not meet its poison. -Agr. 163. Yes, I will be gone, Agr. 165. The Soil, . . . will not teem in vain, E. G. 6. As lawless force from confidence will grow E. G.98. A fairer flower will never bloom again: Child 4. Sure Delia will tell me! Am. Lines 8. The Bishop of Chester, ... If you scratch him will fester. ■♦ Ext. Keene 4. •(■Maggots too will form and nourish; Ode 16. Willey. See Willy. Williams. Young Williams fought for England's fair rencwn; Williams 2. Willing. Sovereign of the willing soul, P. P. 13. The willing homage Of prostrate Rome, Agr. 76. Willowy. Where willowy Camus lingers with delight! Inst. 29. Willy. 'T is Willy [Willey, Lett, 4 ] begs, Shak. 3. Wind. a voice in every wind, Eton 39. Wind, vb. The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea, El. 2. Winded. See Long-winded. Winding. See Silver-winding, Slowly-wind- ing. thro' each winding [echoing, Whar.] vale ... the notes prolong. F. S. 59. Such as . . . Come (sweep) along some winding entry L. S. 102. Winding-sheet. The winding-sheet of Edward's race. Bard 50. Window. Out of the window, whisk, they flew, L. S. 79. Windows. Rich windows that exclude the light, L. S. 7. Winds. Norman sails afar Catch the winds, Owen 16. Command the Winds, and tame th' unwilling Deep. E. G. 43. How riseing winds the face of Ocean sweep, Prop? 23. Sailors to tell of Winds and Seas delight, Prop? 59. Winds, vb. The lowing Herd winds slowly o'er the Lea, El. Dods. 2. the rich stream of music winds along P. P. 7. Windsor's. the stately brow Of Windsor's heights Eton 6. Wing. The insect youth are on the wing, Spring 25. As waving fresh their gladsome wing, Eton 17. With ruffled plumes, and flagging wing: P. P. 22. Tho' fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing Bard 3. On expectation's strongest wing to soar Agr. 42. Morn . . . Waves her dew-bespangled wing, Vic. 2. Winged. Art it requires, and more than winged speed. Tasso 30. Wings. See also Seraph-wings. On hasty wings thy youth is flown; Sprirtg^S. Waves . . . her many-colour'd wings. Bard 124. had her wanton son Lent us his wings, Agr. 190. Her rapid wings the transient scene pursue, Ign. 34. By reason's light on resolution's wings, E. G. 75. broods o'er Egypt with his wat'ry wings, E. G. 103. Rise, my soul ! on wings of fire, Vic. 17. f Expand their wings of flimzey Gold. Ode 48. Wins. she wins her easy way: P. P. 39. Winter. Climes, where Winter holds his Reign, E. G. 5. the Brood of Winter view A brighter Day, E. G. 54. and skies serene Speak not always winter past. Song io. And winter binds the floods in icy chains, Tasso 18. Winter's. The winter's snow, the summer's heat, Odin 32. Winters. When he had fifty winters o'er him, L. S. 10. Wintry. Forgetful of their wintry trance, The Birds . . . greet: Vic. II. the cloudy Magazines maintain Their wintry war, Prop? 26. Wiped 156 Wondrous Wiped. Of th' half devoured Head he wiped, Dante 3. Wisdom. Wisdom in sable garb array'd Adv. 25. Wise. Tis folly to be wise. Eton 100. love could teach a monarch to be wise, E. G. 108. Wiser. Tho' wiser than Nestor Ext. Keene 2. Wish. With many an ardent wish, Cat 21. Alas, who would not wish to please her ! L. S. 36. Did I not wish to check this . . . passion, Agr. 106. To start from short slumbers, and wish for the morning — Am. Lines 3. Wished. He gain'd . . . ('t was all he wish'd) a friend. El. 124. she fear'd, or wish'd to be pursued. Agr. 199. And while they wished him dead, Toph. 3. Wishes. Their sober wishes never learn'd to stray; El. 74. anxious Cares and endless Wishes El. Mas. 86. mutual Wishes, mutual Woes endear E. G. 36. To Cynthia all my Wishes I confine; Prop? 68. Wistful. With whistful eyes pursue the setting sun. El. Mas. 120. Wit. Theirs . . . wild wit, Eton 46. Heaven Had arm'd with spirit, wit, and satire: L. S. 30. No very great wit, Char. 4. With, omitted. Withdrawing-room. j-Open the (foors of the withifra wing-room; Ch.Cr. 2. Withheld. These conscious shame withheld, Stat. 1 25. Within. desart-beach Pent within its bleak domain, F. S. 38. within the spatious walls, L. S. 9. the spark . . . that glows within their breasts, Agr. 128. A heart, within whose sacred cell Clerke 3. nor wept, for all Within was Stone: Dante 54. within That House of Woe. Dante 60. Without. Without design to hurt the butter, L. S. 123. unguarded and without a lictor, Agr. 5. Without a spell to raise, Agr. 16. To weep without knowing the cause of my an- guish: Am. Lines 2. Swift shoots the Village-maid . . . Smooth, with- out step, Tasso 20. Pangs without respite, fires that ever glow, Prop. 2 40. Withstands. Freedom still withstands Th' encroaching tide, E. G. 60. Withstood. The little Tyrant of his fields withstood, El. 58. a River . . . all further course withstood; Tasso 8. Wit's. If any spark of wit's delusive ray Ign. 19. Woe. laughing . . . Amid severest woe. Eton 80. she learn'd to melt at others' woe. Adv. 16. Robed in the sable garb of woe, Bard 17. With fury pale, and pale with woe, Bard Lett. 1 17. Orkney's woe, and Randver^s bane. F. S. 8. What Virgins these, in speechless woe, Odin 75. Her infant image . . . Sits smiling on a father's woe: Clerke 10. Chastised by sabler tints of woe; Vic. 42. within That House of Woe. Dante 61. •(•With Woe behind, and Wantonness before. Ch. Cr. 61. Woeful. woeful wan, like one forlorn, El. Dods. 107. Cried the square Hoods in woful fidget L. S. 135. Woeful-wan. drooping, woeful-wan, like one forlorn, El. 107. Woes. The rival of her crown and of her woes, Inst. 44. mutual Wishes, mutual Woes endear E. G. 36. But pictured horrour and poetic woes. Prop. 2 50. and Sleep Prophetic of my Woes Dante 27. Woful. See Woeful. Wolf. See also She-WOlf. A Wolf full-grown; Dante 31. Womankind. ■(•And brings all Womankind before your view; Ch. Cr. 59. Woman's. Her household cares, a woman's best employ- ment. Agr. 8. Womb. Slaves from the womb, Agr. 130. Won. my Ear, Won by thy Tongue, Dante 12. Wonder. The hapless Nymph with wonder saw: Cat 19. What wonder, if to patient valour train'd E. G. 94. What wonder in the sultry climes, E. G. 100. Great things and full of wonder ... I shall un- fold; Tasso 35. Where fix'd in wonder stood the warlike pair, Tasso 25. And wonder at the sudden Funeral. Prop. 3 98. Wondered. Have seen your soul, and wonder'd at its daring : „r J Agr - 55 ' Wondrous. when lo! appears The wondrous Sage: Tasso 12. attracts the wondrous sight, Tasso 69. What wondrous force the solid earth can move, Prop. 2 30. A wond'rous [giant, MS.] boy shall Rinda bear, Odin 65. Wont 157 Wrapped Wont. legions wont to stem With stubborn nerves Agr. 1 08. Wonted. in our Ashes live their wonted Fires. El. 92. The Fields to all their wonted Tribute bear; West II. And to this bosom give its wonted Peace, Prop. 3 88. Wood. Hard by yon wood, El. 105. Nor up the lawn, nor at the wood El. 112. brave the savage rushing from the wood, E. G. 93. Woodlark. the Woodlark piped her farewell Song, El. Mas. 119. There pipes the woodlark, Birds I. Woods. Woods, that wave o'er Delphi's steep, P. P. 66. How bow'd the woods beneath their . . . stroke! El. 28. While vales and woods and echoing hills rebound. Stat? 17. As when athwart the dusky woods by night Tasso 47. Woody. The theatre's green height and woody wall Tremble Stat? 14. Wooed. I ... Oft woo'd the gleam of Cynthia Inst. 32. Woof. Weave the warp, and weave the woof, Bard 49. Weave we the woof. Bard 98. 'T is the woof of victory. F. S. 20. Wooing. A wooing he went, C. C. 3. Woos. She woo's the tardy spring: Vict,. Word. Stung by a senseless word, Agr. 133. Swift at the word, from out the gazing host, Stat. 1 4. Words. Thoughts, that breath, and words, that bum. P.P. no. The words too eager to unriddle, L. S. 81. Words that steal from my tongue, Am. Lines 6. Wore. The laureate wreath, that Cecil wore Inst. 84. Work. The work is done. Bard 100. Join the wayward work to aid: F. S. 19. Sisters, cease, the work is done. F. S. 52. Works. So from our works sublinier fumes shall rise; Shak. 22. World. Sinks the fabric of the world. Odin 94. leaves the world to darkness and to me. El. 4. The thoughtless World to Majesty may bow, El. Mas. 73. the world, you gave him, Suffices not Agr. 58. The world, the prize; Agr. 153. triumphant o'er the vanquish'd world; Ign. 28. To rush, and sweep them from the world! Hoel 4. Beyond the confines of our narrow world: Tasso 34. Shall sink this beauteous fabric of the world; Prop? 28. Worm. See Silk-worm. Worn. fear might then have worn The mask Agr. 48. Worst. But what awaits me now is worst of all. Shak. 8. Worthier. Receive a worthier load; Stat} 19. Wot. •j-But, I wot, they loved not true. Rond. 8. Would. See also I 'd , She 'd, 'T would. Thought would destroy their paradise. Eton 98. Yet oft before his infant eyes would run P.P. 118. His listless length . . . would he stretch, El. 103. Mutt 'ring his . . . fancies he would rove, El. 106. Coarse panegyricks would but teaze her. L. S. 34. Alas, who would not wish to please her! L. S. 36. The Godhead would have back'd his quarrel, L.5.93. Numbers would give their oaths upon it, L. S. iz-j. Lubbers, That to eternity would sing, L. S. 143. would have dropp'd, but that her pride restrain'd it? Agr. 11. Owls would [might, MS. ; should, Nich.j have hooted in St. Peter's choir, View 23. Ere the spring he would return — Song 2. Yet would the Tyrant Love permit me raise Prop. 3 31. Not Marius' Cimbrian Wreaths would I relate, Prop. 3 39. What would you have? yet wept I not, Dante 57. Wouldest. Woulds't thou revive the deep Despair, Dante 4. Wound. To soften, not to wound my heart. Adv. 44. He wound with toilsome march his long array. Bard 12. Gor'd with many a gaping wound: F. S. 42. She felt the wound she left behind, Clerke 8. who can probe the undiscover'd Wound? Prop? 92. ■Hs to tear the closing wound. Rond. 32. Wove. The web is wove. Bard 100. Wrapped. wrapt in flames, . . . Sinks the fabric of the world. j Odin 93. Wrapt 158 Yet Wrapt. See Wrapped. Wreak. If then he wreak on me his wicked will, Shak. 13. Wreath. The laureate wreath, that Cecil wore Inst. 84. Wreathed. Chains . . . Wreathed in many a golden link: Hoel 15. Wreathes. Beech, That wreathes its old . . . roots so high, El. 102. Wreaths. Not Marius' Cimbrian Wreaths would I relate, Prop. 3 39. Wretch. Then whirl the wretch from high, Eton 72. See the Wretch, that long has tost Vic. 45. and known To many a Wretch Dante 25. Wrings. that unutter'd nathless wrings My inmost Heart ? Dante 5. Wrinkled. Wrinkled beldams Teach it Agr. 135. Write. Of those loose Curls, that Ivory front I write; Prop? 11. ■j-I burn to write; Ode 27. Wrongs. benefits ... As unrequited wrongs. Agr. 76. now hear My Wrongs, Dante 15. Wrote. Wrote on the stone beneath yon aged thorn. El. Mas. 136. its will seem'd wrote in lines of blood, Agr. 70. •Jrooling breezes I only wrote of; Ode 21. Wrought. in fancy's airy colouring wrought Bent. 7. Yawning. Down the yawning steep he rode, Odin 3. Ye, omitted. Year. And wake the purple year! Spring 4. thy rigid lore . . . many a year she bore : A dv. 14. Richly paint the vernal year: P. P. 90. Mark the year, and mark the night, Bard 53. There scatter'd oft, the earliest of the Year, El. Pem. 117; Mas. 137. blast the vernal Promise of the Year. E. G. 21. Yesterday the sullen year Saw . . . whirlwind fly; Vic. 21. Who measured out the year, Prop? 38. ■(•Then for a Moiety of the Year Ode 41. Years. Years of havock urge their destined course, Bard%$. their years, spelt by th' unletter'd muse, El. 81. resolution To smuggle a few years, View 3. vigorous he seem'd in years, Tasso 12. •(•Not like yon Dowager deprest with years; Ch. Cr. 6. Yell. long pursues, with fruitless yell, The Father Odin 11. Yes. Yes, we may meet, ungrateful boy, Agr. 140. Yes, I will be gone, Agr. 165. Yesterday. Yesterday the sullen year Saw . . . whirlwind fly; Vic. 21. Their raptures . . . No yesterday, nor morrow know; Vic . 26. Yet. Yet hark, how thro' the peopled air Spring 23. A stranger yet to pain! Eton 14. Yet see how all around 'em wait Eton 55. Yet, ah! why should they know their fate? Eton 95. Yet oft before his infant eyes P. P. 118. Yet when they first were open'd P. P. MS. 118. Yet shall he mount, P. P. 121. Yet never can he fear P. P. MS. 122. they linger yet, Avengers of their native land: Bar d 45. Yet thou, proud boy, Bard MS. 75. he yet may share the feast: Bard 79. Yet awhile my call obey; Odin 73. Yet . . . these bones from insult to protect El. 77. nor yet beside the rill, El. in. Yet on his way ... he prefer'd his case, L. 5. 89. Yet something he was heard to mutter, L. S. 121. Yet hop'd,that he might save his bacon: L. S. 126. Yet hither oft a glance . . . They send Inst. 19. sweeter yet The . . . voice of gratitude. Inst. 63. Yet 't would dash his joy To hear Agr. 13. the spirit of Britannicus Yet walks on earth: Agr. 15. when yet a stranger To adoration, Agr. 33. Nor am I yet to learn how vast the debt Agr. 56. the idle herd ... yet will start, Agr. 131. Yet if your injur'd shades demand my fate, Agr. 184. Yet Morning smiles the busy Race to chear, West 9. yet still to fancy new, Ign. 33. Why yet does Asia dread a Monarch's nod, E. G. 59. while yet he strays Along the . . . vale Gierke n. Yet Nature could not furnish out the feast, View 11. yet the dread path once trod, Stanza 2. Nor tempts he yet the plain, Stat. 1 45. Nor yet in prospect rose the distant shore; Tasso 5. Yet would the Tyrant Love permit me raise Prop? 31. yet if the telling may Beget Dante 6. That which yet remains ... I shall unfold, Dante 18. Yew-tree's 159 Youthful sleep as yet Gave not to know Dante 42. But yet in low and uncompleated Sounds Dante 44. yet wept I not, or answer'd Dante 57. That Day, and yet another, mute we sate, Dante 70. yet a fourth Day came Dante 72. fP pokes his head out, yet Ch. Cr. 29. Yew-tree's. Beneath . . . that yew-tree's shade, El. 13. Yield. Oft did the harvest to their sickle yield, El. 25. Yielding. Say you saw her Yielding due reverence Agr. 4. fond reluctance, yielding modesty, Agr. 197. When, less averse, and yielding to Desires, Prop? 21. Yields. The . . . South to the Destroyer yields E. G. 52. Yoke. souls, That struggle with the yoke. Agr. 127. Proud of the yoke, and pliant to the rod, E. G. 58. Yon. In yon bright track, . . . They melt, Bard 103. yon sanguine cloud, l?arj 135. For whom yon [the, MS.] glittering board is spread, Odin 41. Drest for whom yon golden bed. Odin 42. Hard by yon wood, El. 105. the stone beneath yon aged thorn. El. 116. Ah! what means yon violet flower! Song 3. yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 19. Why does yon Orb, , . . Obscure his radiance Prop. 2 33. yNot like yon Dowager deprest with years; Ch. Cr. 6. Yonder. On yonder cliffs, ... I see them sit, Bard 44. from yonder ivy-mantled tower El. 9. at the foot of yonder nodding beech, El. 101. the high brow of yonder hanging lawn. El. Mas. 116. From yonder realms . . . Bursts . . . th' in- dignant lay: Inst. 13. Search to what regions yonder Star retires, Prop? 19. Yore. Where long of yore to sleep was laid Odin 19. York. So York shall taste what Clouet never knew, Shak. 21. YOU, omitted. You '11. And many a copious Narrative you '11 see Prop? 29. Young. The bloom of young Desire, P. P. 41. when I Oped his young eye Agr. 45. borne By the young Trojan to his . . . bark Agr. 196. Spread the young Thought, E. G. 12. Young Williams fought for England's fair renown; Williams 2. Young Pterelas with strength unequal drew, Stat. 1 5. You whose young bosoms feel a nobler flame, Prop? 53. His young ones ran beside him. Dante 32. Younger. Triumph To the younger King. F. S. 56. Youngsters. Yon puny ball Let youngsters toss: Stat. 1 20. Your. Not all that tempts your . . . eyes Cat 40. How do your tuneful Echo's languish, P. P. 71. Ye died amidst your dying country's cries — Bar d 42. Now your thundering faulchion wield; F. S. Pern. 62. Now your sable steed bestride, F. S. Pem. 63. Your Hist'ry whither are you spinning? L. S. 19. I trod your level lawn, Inst. 31. your errand is perform'd, Agr. 1. Tell your master, His mother shall obey him. Agr. 2. These were your gift, Agr. 80. Never hang down your head, C. C. 31. But stint your clack for sweet St. Charitie Shak. 2. Weddell attends your call, Corn. Lines I. When you rise from your Dinner as light as be- fore, Couplet I. band, Who trust your arms Stat. 1 17. difficult the toil To seek your Hero Tasso 28. Great things ... in your ears I shall unfold; Tasso 35. but first dismiss your fears; Tasso 36. Yours. these, by ties confirm'd, . . . are yours. Agr. 114. Youth. The insect youth are on the wing, Spring 25. On hasty wings thy youth is flown; Spring 48. redolent of joy and youth, Eton 19. pineing Love shall waste their youth, Eton 65. to hear the savage Youth repeat P. P. 60. Youth on the prow, Bard 74. A Youth, to Fortune . . . unknown. El. 118. haughty youthf,] and irritated power[,] Agr. 26, 28. pleasures That wait on youth, Agr. 79. Ah, gallant youth! this marble tells the rest, Williams II. Long as of youth the joyous hours remain, Prop? I. Happy the Youth, and not unknown to Fame, Prop? 65. Of all our Youth the Ambition and the Praise! Prop? 104. ■f- Youth, his torrid Beams thay [that?] plays, Ode 13. Youthful. Youthful knights, and barons bold Bard MS. III. spread O'er the youthful King your shield. F. S. 32. Youth's 160 Zone to grace thy youthful brow, The laureate wreath, Zembla's. Inst. 83. dauntless goes . . . through Zembla's snows? Too, too secure in youthful pride, Hoel 5. E. G. 77. Youth's. Be love my youth's pursuit, Prop? 52. Zephyr. soft the Zephyr blows, Bard 71. Youths. The love of honour bade two youths advance, Zephyrs. Cool Zephyrs thro' the clear blue sky Spring 9. Stat} 9. Zone. All but two youths th' enormous orb decline, What fancied Zone can circumscribe the soul, Stat. 1 24. E. G. 73. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY |J)rUR ! UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. AP CD mi Form L9-Seri . THE LIBRARY 1111 1I11I1IIIIU|I 13 3 1158 00314 1693 UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000 380 065 3