■ 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. . 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? 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