A LEXICAL CONCORDANCE TO SHELLEY'S POETICAL WORKS OXFORD PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY A LEXICAL CONCORDANCE TO THE POETICAL WORKS OF PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY AN ATTEMPT TO CLASSIFY EVERY WORD FOUND THEREIN ACCORDING TO ITS SIGNIFICATION COMPILED AND ARRANGED BY F. S. ELLIS * In this world, who can do a thing, will not ; And who would do it, cannot, I perceive : Yet the will's somewhat — somewhat, too, the power — , And thus we half-men struggle ' Browning, Andrea del Sarto ' Pourquoi demander au rossignol ce que signifie son chant ? II ne pent expliquer qu'en recom- men9ant a chanter; on ne peut le comprendre qu'en se laissant aller a I'impression qu'il produit' CoRXNNE, Livre VII LONDON BERNARD QUARITCH, 15 PICCADILLY 1892 TO THE GLORIOUS AND BEAUTIFUL SPIRIT FOR A FEW BRIEF YEARS KNOWN UPON EARTH AS PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY ' THIS BOOK IS HUMBLY BUT LOVINGLY DEDICATED IN FULL CONSCIOUSNESS OF ITS IMPERFECTIONS AND SHORTCOMINGS BUT IN THE HOPE THAT IT MAY BE OF SOME USE TO STUDENTS OF THE GREAT POET's WORKS SOME WORDS BY WAY OF APOLOGY FOR THE BRINGING TOGETHER AND SETTING FORTH OF THIS BOOK TH E making of a concordance is but a simple matter, needing only patience, industry and time. With the two former humble requisites I have been furnished by nature, with the latter by circumstance. If in going beyond the plain matter of a concordance, my ambition and goodwill have overlapped my ability, then I must cry pardon of my critics, if indeed critics should trouble themselves with my work, of the shortcomings of which I am but too well conscious. For efficient aid in the transcription of about one half of the lines, I render willing and hearty thanks to Mr. Alfred Fountain, Mr. Foster Watson, Mrs. Scoffern, Mr. G. Thorn Drury, Miss M. S. Grove (her last work alas !), Mr. G. R. Tutin, Mr. F. G. Aylward, Mr. W. W. Aylward, Miss P. M. Ellis, Miss V, V. Wilson, Mr. W. Kineton Parkes, Miss E. B. Cohen, Dr. C. E. Shepherd, Miss Power, and Mr. T. Herbert Bindley, to whom also I am greatly obliged for the help he gave me in the arrangement and annotation of the slips under M. The assistance thus given I estimate to have spared me a year's work, and so to have enabled me to bring the book out thus opportunely. To Dr. Furnivall for his ever-ready advice and assistance, and to Mr. W. M. Rossetti for his valuable suggestions and corrections, which I cannot overvalue, I beg to tender my grateful acknowledgments. To those who would induce time to spread wide his wings, and who would drive from their spirits the cloud of minor vexations with which life is beset, I can heartily recommend the making of a concordance. The day when I began this work, six years since, seems but as yesterday. Had I been less in love with my author, I might have spared many hundreds of references without lessening the mere usefulness of the book, and with a good chance of bettering my publisher's profits ; but those who love the poet as well as I do will spare their censures on this head, and tender me instead their thanks. If my work should in any degree be esteemed of value by that small number of persons who love Shelley's Poems, I shall then feel myself more than repaid for all the labour I have bestowed upon it. I am led to believe that there is but a very limited number of people in the world who care for Shelley's Poetry, by the fact that I never met with a single person outside the circle of ( viii ) professed students of it, who could lay claim to having read more than two or three of his most celebrated lyrics. This is not so surprising when we consider that there is little enjoyment to be derived from his works by those who read as they run ; but that they afford an ever-increasing and permanent treasure of delight to those who will be at the pains to study them, may, I am quite sure, be safely affirmed. To those who would know Shelley, apart from his earthly entanglements, I would say, cast aside the so-called biographies and study all that is worth knowing of his life, his soul's life, in his poems. Let us call to mind and well think over the pregnant words of Walt Whitman : 'When I read the book, the biography famous, And is this, then, (said I,) what the author calls a man's life ? And so will some one, when I am dead and gone, write my life ? (As if any man really knew aught of my life ; Why, even I myself, I often think, know little or nothing of my real life ; Only a few hints— a few diffused, faint clues and indirections, I seek, for my own use, to trace out here.) ' Well would it be for the world if no more was known of any poet's life, except through his works, than is known of Shakespeare's; how greatly should we then be delivered from misknowing ! That this book is published in the centenary year of the poet's birth is an undesigned coincidence. Torquay, 1892 A TABLE OF THE REFERENCES AS ABBREVIATED FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS CONCORDANCE AND OF THE TITLES OF THE POEMS AS GIVEN IN THE TEXT OF THE EDITION IN TWO VOLUMES EDITED BY H. B. FORMAN Reference. A Dirge Adonais . . Adon. Cane. Adonis. A last or . . Allegory Apenn. . Apollo . . April, 1 814 Arabic . Arethusa . Autumn Aziola . . Bigotry . . Bion. Elegy Bridal . Calderon Carlton . Castl. Adm Cat . . Cavalcanti Cenci Ck. 1st. . Circumst. Cloud Coleridge Con. Sing. Const. Couplets Critic . Cyclops . Dmmon I. Desmon II. Dante Convito Death . . Death (2) . Death, Dial. Death Nap. Full Title. A Dirge, il. 280. . Adonais. I. 514, Cancelled passages of Adonais. I. 529- Fragment of Bion's Elegy on the death of Adonis. II. 340, Alastor. i. 3. An Allegory. II. 226. Passage of the Apennines. II. 171. Hymn of Apollo. Ii. 204, Stanzas — April, 18 14. X. 23. From the Arabic, An Imitation. n. 231. Arethusa. il. 201. Antumn : a Dirge. II. 32. The Aziola. II. 238. Bigotry's Victim. Ii. 415. Fragment of the Elegy on the death of Bion. ll. 341. A Bridal Song. 11. 243. Scenes translated from the Magico Prodigioso of Calderon. 11.347. Fragment on a Fete at Carlton House. II. 417. Lines written during the Castle- reagh Administration, il. 185. Verses on a Cat. 11. 389. Sonnet of Cavalcanti to Dante. H. 347- The Cenci. I. 258. Charles the First. II. no. Circumstance, Translated from the Greek, il. 339. The Cloud, i. 446. To Coleridge. I. 22. To Constantia singing, il. 160. ToConstantia. 11. 161. Couplets. II. 266. Lines to a Critic. 11. 170. The Cyclops. 11. 312. Daemon of the World, Part I. i. 30. „ „ Part II. 1.38. The first Canzone of the Convito of Dante. 11. 343. Death. 11. 28. Death. 11. 29. Death: a Dialogue, 11.392. Written on hearing the news of the death of Napoleon. I. 57i- Reference. Death Vanq. . . Devil .... Dirge for Year . E. Viviani E. Williams . . Engl. 1819 . . Epips Epitaph . . . Epithalamium Epithalamium (2) Eug. Hills . . Evening, Pisa Exhortation . . Eyes E. Godwin . . . Eall of Bonaparte Falsehood . . Far, far azvay Faust . . . Fiordispina Fr. Byron . , „ Calm . „ Come thou „ Consequence „ Dead . . ,, Dream „ Face . . „ Fitful . . „ Flourishing „ Gentle Story „ Ghst. Sty. ,, Hark ! the Oivle „ Home . ., Incant. . . „ Insecurity „ Invit. . . . ., Is not ... Full Title. Death vanquished. 11. 393. The Devil's Walk. 11. 425. Dirge for the Year. il. 229. To Emilia Viviani. 11. 231. To Edward Williams. II. 239. Sonnet: England in 1819. II. 187. Epipsychidion. I. 491. Epitaph. II. 283. Epithalamium. 11. 243. Another version. 11. 244. Lines written among the Euganean Hills. I. 237. Evening, Ponte a Mare, Pisa. il. 260. An Exhortation. I. 442. Eyes. II. 423. On Fanny Godwin. 11. 166. Feelings of a republican on the fall of Bonaparte. 1.27. Falsehood and Vice. il. 495. Lines 'Far, far away.' il. 232. Scenes from Goethe's Faust. II. 370. Fiordispina. il. 222. Fragment of an address to Byron. II. 177. ,, Calm Thoughts. II. 194. ,, Come thou. 11. 265. ,, Consequence. Ii. 227. ,, Dead,butnot Forgotten. II. 195. ,, of a Dream. 11.266. „ A Face. 11. 228. „ Fitful Rain. II. 197. „ Flourishing Vine. 11. 178. ,, A gentle story of two lovers young. 11. 195. „ of a Ghost Story, il. 155. Hark! the Owlet flaps his wings. II. 390. „ on Home. II. 155. ., of an Incantation. 11. 195- ,, Insecurity. Ii. 266. „ of an Invitation. II. 193. ,, Is not to-day enough? II. 192. b X TABLE OF REFERENCES Reference. Full Title. Reference Full Title. Fr. Italy . . . . Fragment : To Italy, ii. 193. I fear . . . . . I fear thy kisses. II. 207. „ Keats . . . . on Keats. II. 266, I would not . . I would not be a king. II. 253. „ Love's Atmos. . >» Love's Atmosphere. 11. Ind. Ser. . . The Indian Serenade. 11. 190. 197. Ind. Ser. Cane. . . Cancelled passage of the Indian „ Love Univ. . . fi Love the Universe. li. Serenade. 11. 191. 194 Intell. Beatify . . . Hymn to Intellectual Beauty, i. „ Milton .... J, Milton s Spirit. II. 228. 247. „ Moon .... >' To the Moon. 11. 283. Invoc. Misery . . . Invocation to Misery. II. 172. „ My head . . . 'J Myhead isv/ild, li. 178. Ireland . . . . . To Ireland. II. 423. „ My head is heavy » My head is heavy, il. Isle .... . . The Isle. 11. 282. 228. Jane .... . . To Jane. 11. 279. „ Peace . . . . :) Peace first and last. 11. Jane, Invit. . . To Jane, The Invitation. 11. 272. 2.o3- Jane, Recoil. . . . To Jane, The Recollection. 11.274. „ People of Eng. . >> To the People of Eng- Julian . . . . . Julian and Maddalo. il. 2. land. II. 188. Julian Cane. . . . Cancelled passages of Julian and „ Pleasure . . . jj The Birth of Pleasure. Maddalo. 11. 18. 11. 193. Lament. . . . . A Lament. 11. 238. „ Poetry .... )» Poetry and Music, il. 196, Laon, Bed. . . Dedication to Laon and Cythna. I. 62. „ Prison . . . j> To a Friend leaving Laon . . . . . Laon and Cythna. I. 66. prison. 11. 168. Id. Ch. . . . . . To the Lord Chancellor. 11. 162. „ Roman's . . . » The Roman's Chamber. II, 196. Lerici . . . . Lines written in the Bay of Lerici. II. 280. „ Pome . . . . J) Rome and Nature. 11. Liberty . . . . . Liberty. II. 216. 196. Lift not . . . . Sonnet. II. 172. „ Satan .... yt Satan loose. 11. 168. Love .... . . Love. II. 414. „ Satire .... » of a Satire upon Satire. Loves Phil. . , . Love's Philosophy. Ii. 200. II. 210. Love's Rose . . Love's Rose. II. 418. „ Serpent . , . >5 The Serpent. Ii. 197. Love, Hope . . Love, Hope, Desire and Fear. Ii. „ Sing. .... „ To One Singing, n.162. 245- „ Silence . . . » To Silence. ll. 177. Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, „ Song .... J> of a Song. II. 168. M. N. Despair . . ,, Despair. II. 408. „ Soul .... >> A soul known. 11. 192. ,, Fragment . . „ Fragment. II. 409. „ The desarts . . )> The desarts of sleep. II. 227. „ Melody . . „ Melody to a scene of former times. 11. 411. „ The fierce . . . }) The fierce beasts. 11. 178. „ Post. Fr. . . „ Posthumous Fragments. „ The gentleness . >> The gentleness of rain. 11.402. 11.265. „ Ravail . . „ Epithalamium of Fran- „ The rude . . . }t The rude windis singing. cis Ravaillac. i. 404. 11.267. „ Spec. Hor r. . „ Spectral Horseman. II. „ Thoughts . . , »> Thoughts. II. 170. ,410. „ Unf. Tale . , >' An unfinished tale. ll. 196. M. W. G. . , , . To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. n. 152. „ Unrisen . . , >1 Unrisen splendour. II. Magnet. Lady . . The Magnetic Lady. il. 270. 229. Mar. Dr. . . . . Marianne's Dream. 11. 156. „ Unsat. .... ,, Unsatisfied desires. II. Marenghi . . . . Marenghi. II. 180. 169. Mary . . . . . To Mary — . 11. 175. „ Vita Nuova . . }t adapted from Dante's Vita nuova. il. 346. Mary, who died . . To Mar)', who died in this opinion. II. 418. „ Wandering . . >> Wandering, il. 254. Mask . . . . . The Mask of Anarchy, il. 33. „ Wine .... >> Wine of Eglantine. Ii. Matilda . . . . . Matilda gathering flowers. 11.345. 194. Medusa . . . . . On the Medusa of Leonardo da Fugitives .... The Fugitives.' 11. 233. Vinci. II. 199. Ginevra Ginevra. II. 254. Men of Eng. . . . Song to the men of England. 11. Gisb Letter to Maria Gisbome. il. 74. 186. Good Night . . . Good Night. II. 217. Mexican . . . . The Mexican Revolution. 11. 421. Guitar Jane , . . With a Guitar, to Jane. 11. 277. Mont B. . . . . Mont Blanc, i. 47. Harriet To Harriet. II. 430. Mont B. Cane. . . Cancelled passage of Mont Blanc. Hate Song . . . , A Hate -song (improvised). 11. I. 51. 170. Moon . . . . . To the Moon. 11. 225. Helena Kissing Helena, il. 339. Moonbeam . . . . To the Moonbeam. 11. 416. Hellas Hellas. I- 535- Moschus . . . . Translation from Moschus. i. 29. Horn. Cast. . , . Homer's Hymn to Castor and Mother and Son . . Mother and Son. II. 419. Pollux . II. 306. Music, L pant . . . Music. II. 264. „ Earth . . . Homer's Hymn to the Earth, 11. Music, when soft . . Music,whensoftvoicesdie. II. 235. 308. Mutability . . . . Mutability, i. 24. „ Merc. . . Homer's Hymn to Mercury, il. Mutability (2) . . Mutability, il. 236. 284. Naples . . . . . Ode to Naples. 11. 211. „ Min. . . . Homer's Hymn to Minerva, il. Nat. Anth. . . . National Anthem. II. 189. 309. thou . . . . . thou whose dear love gleamed „ Moon . . . Homer's Hymn to the Moon. 11. II, 417. 307- Ode, Arise . . . . An Ode [written October, 18 19]. „ Sun .... Homer's Hymn to the Sun. ir. I. 445- 308. Ode Lib. . . . . Ode to Liberty, i. 452. „ Venus . . . Homer's Hymn to Venus. 11. 310. Ode lib. Cane. . . Cancelled passage of the Ode to Hope, Fear . . . Hope, Fear, and Doubt. 11. 228. Liberty, i. 460. AS ABBREVIATED IN THIS CONCORDANCE. XI Reference. Ode to Heaven Ode W. Wind (Ediptis . . One word . Orpheus Otho . . . Ozym. . . Pan . . . Fan, Echo . Past . . . Peter . . Pr. Athan . Prol. Hellas Prom. . . Proserpine . Q. Mad . . Q. of my heart Question Questions . Rarely . . Remembrance Reviewer . Rosal. . Poems from St. Jr. (i) . „ (2) . „ (3) • „ (4) • » (5) • ». (6) . Sensit. PI. . Serchio . . Similes . . Skylark Solitary Sonn. Byron. Sonn. Dante Sonn. Nile. Sonn. Political Sophia . Sp. Plato . Stanza, Bracknell St St. Wealth St. Deject. Star . . , Stella . . St. Epips. . Summer Summer-Evg. Full Title. . Ode to Heaven, i. 440. . Ode to the West Wind. i. 443. . Qidipus Tyrannus. I. 462. . One word is too often profaned. 11. 242, . Orpheus, il. 219. . Otho. II. 167. . Ozymandias. I. 250. . Hymn of Pan. II. 206. . Pan, Echo, and the Satyr. 11.342. . The Past. 11. 172. . Peter Bell the Third, il. 47. . Prince Athanase. 11. 19. . Prologue to Hellas. II. 247. . Prometheus Unbound, i. 345. . Song of Proserpine. 11. 209. . Queen Mab. Ii. 431. . Queen of my heart. 11. 423. . The Question. Ii. 203. . Fragment : Questions, il. 193. . Song. II. 235. . Remembrance. 11. 239. . Lines to a Reviewer. 11. 210. Rosalind and Helen, i. 202. Irvyne. Number i. II. 394. Number 2. 11. 395. Number 3. 11. 396. Number 4. Ii. 399. Number 5. 11. 400. Number 6. II. 400. . The Sensitive Plant. I. 426. . The Boat on the Serchio. Ii. i6o. . Similes for two political characters. II. 188. . To a Skylark. I. 449. . The Solitary. Ii. 391. . Sonnet to Byron. Ii. 264. . Dante's Sonnet to Cavalcanti. i. 29. . Sonnet, To the Nile. 11. 171. . Sonnet.' Political Greatness. Ii. 237. . Sophia. II. 191. . Spirit of Plato. Ii. 339. . Stanza, written at Bracknell. 11. 152. . Stanza : Wealth and Love. II. 169. . Stanzas. Written in dejection near Naples. II. 30. . To a Star. 11. 417. . To Stella, Translated from Plato. n. 338. . Studies for Epipsychidion. i. 507. . Summer and Winter. 11. 209. . A Summer- evening Churchyard. I. 26. Reference. Sunset . . . Superstition . Tasso . . . Tasso, Song . Tear .... Terza Rima . That time . The cold . . There is no Work Time . . . Time long past To-tnorro-M To Night . . Tower of Fafu. Tremble Kings Triumph . . Two Fr. Invoc. „ Love „ Mary ,, Musi Two Spirits Unf. Dr. . Violet . Virgil . Vis. Sea W.Jew . W.Jew, Song W. Godzvin W. Shelley . W. Shelley, Cane W. Shelley (2) W. Shelley (3) Waning Moon We meet . . When passion When the Lamp Witch . . . Witch, Ded. , Woodman . Wordsworth , WorlcTs Wanderers Ye hasten . . Yet look . . Zucca . . . Full Title. The Sunset. 11. 154. Superstition, i. 28. Scene from 'Tasso.' il. 178. Song for 'Tasso.' 11. 179. The Tear. 11. 413. Fragment of Terza Rima. 11.267. That time is dead for ever, 11. 29. The cold earth slept below, 11. 28. There is no work, I. 25. Time. il. 232. Time long past. II. 226. To-morrow. Ii. 241. To Night. II. 230. The Tower of Famine, 11. 224. Stanza : ' Tremble Kings.' 11. 413. The Triumph of Life. 11. 136. Two Fragments of Invocation. 1 1, 267. Two Fragments on Love. 11. 265. Two Fragments to Mary. 11. 198. Two Fragments to Music. 11. 169. The Two Spirits : An Allegory. 11. 207. Fragments of an unfinished Drama. II. 103. Song, on a Faded Violet. 11. 30. Fragment of Virgil's Tenth Ec- logue. II. 342. A Vision of the Sea. i. 436. Passage from the Wandering Jew. II. 391. Song from the Wandering Jew. 1 1 , 391- Lines to William Godwin. 11. 162. To William Shelley. II. 164. Cancelled passages of the poem to William Shelley. 11. 166. To William Shelley, il. 197. To William Shelley. II. 198. The Waning Moon. 11. 225. Lines. We meet not as we parted. II. 282. When passion's trance is overpast. II. 242. Lines, When the Lamp is shat- tered. II. 271. The Witch of Atlas, il. 84. Dedication to the Witch of Atlas. II. 83. The Woodman and the Night- ingale. II. 175. To Wordsworth. I. 27. The World's Wanderers. II. 218. Sonnet. 11. 227. Yet look on me. 11. 153. The Zucca. II. 268. LEXICAL-CONCORDANCE. * Words thus marked are not used by Shakespeare. + Words thus marked are not used by Shakespeare in the same sense. J Words thus marked are used only once by Shakespeare. A— ABJECT. A A, indef. art. (1) before the name of individual, object^ notion, &c. Not to be mirrored in a holy songf— Witch, LXII. 2. like a fawn Moaning within a cave, Peter, VI. xxx. 2. There rose to Heaven a sound of angry song. . Orpheus, 72. (2) used connotatively before proper names. There is a Castles, and a Canning, Peter, ill. ii. i. In shape a Scaramouch, in hue Othello. . . . Witch, Ded. VI. 5. (3) following the adj. many a, such a, what a. Save where many a palace gate E'ug- Hills, 129. crown Life's early cup with such a draught of woe ? Aaon. XXXVI. 3. Thou knowest what a thing is Poverty .... Rosal. 473. (4) following the adj. preceded by how, so, as, too. Too sprightly and companionable a man, . . . Cenci^ I. iii. 15. So fair, so wonderful a sight Q. Mab, II. 28. My Witch indeed is not so sweet a creature . . Witch, Ded. v. i. (5) with nouns of multitude eliding ' of.' Charged with a thousand unsuspected crimes . Cenci, I. i. 54. I have wept for joy A thousand times, .... Ch. 1st, II. 487. (6) = durini^ the course of the. (Which the rough shepherd treads but once a year,) Epips. 440. Suiting it to every ray Twenty times a-day ? . . Exhortation, 9. (7) used comparatively with like or as — 2SVj. To think that a boy as fair as he, Rosal. 188. And that a mother, lost like her, 192. Abandon, v. tr. (1) desert, forsake as punishment. Tempt not his spirit to a^aw^/ow thee Cenci, \. \. 126. Another — God, and man, and hope abattdon me ; Hellas, 390. (2) desert or forsake heartlessly. Dost thou indeed abandon me ? Cenci, II. i. 18. If I abandon her who filled the place She left, . II. i. 96. (3) give up, forego. 'All hope abandon ye who enter here ; ' . . . . FVotn. III. iv. 136. (4) leave, go away from. entered into a conspiracy to abandon you, . . Ch. 1st, II. 383. Abandoned, //. (1) Of persons : left without aid, left to fate. No ! Abandon''d he sinks in a trance of despair. Bigotry, I. 5. Seems, and but seems to have abandoned \x%. Cenci, V. iii. 115. themartyredsaintsinRochefortHavebeena5a«(/i9«i?i5? Ch. 1st, I. 84. Render yourselves — they have a^awisfow^rf you— Hellas, 386. She had abandoned him — Julian, 533. From city to city, a^awflfew^a? of pity, .... Qidipns, \. 2\\. Alike ada«(/i?«m and abandoning Unf. Dr. "](>. (2) Of things : left, deserted, gone away from. It had been long abandoned, .... ... Alastor, 301. a shattered portal . . . abandoned now By man, . LMOn, VI. xxvii. 2. Which that we have abandoned now, Rosal. 27. (3) given up to, thrown to. Her corpse shall be abandoned to the hounds ; . Cenci, IV. i. 91. Abandoned, ///. adj. (1) deserted, forsaken, left desolate, thy scarf hadst thrown O'er the aiawt/owerf Earth, Adonais, XLI. 8. The wandering hopes of one abandoned mother, Ef>ips. 304. Topples o'er the a5a;«(/(3M^af sea Eug. Hills, 132. calmer nest Than this abandoned breast ; . . . Far away, I. 4. The price of an abandoned maiden's shame ; . . Faust, 11. 307. And cast the vote of love in hope's aia«rfi9«£rf urn. Laon, IV. xxii. 9. Wailing her own abandoned case, Peter, VI. xxvii. 4. Leaving this abandoned home — O"^^- ^^7- Gleamed few and faint o'er the abandoned icast, Ginevra, 170. O foster-nurse of man's aiawa&iw^ia? glory, . . . Marenghi,Vll. i. As rainy wind thro' the a^awa&iwerf gate . . . Prom. l. 21"]. Abandoned hope, and love that turns to hate ; . II. iv. 24. mouldering fast, o'er their abajidoned shrines : . III. iv. 189. like summer worms On an abandoned corpse, . IV. 314. AnA taX^ oi o\xT abandoned \\om& Rosal. iS. In my lost soul's abandoned night, 392. 'Mid the cold relics of a^aM(/(P«^<3? joy Unf.Dr.2>\. It lies on my abandoned breast, Violet, II. 2. (2) infamous, given up to wickedness. Hell's most a5aWo«£rf fiend Cenci, \.'\. 117. Will none . . . Check the abandoned villain ? . . I. iii. 92. (3) left or departed from. To change the honours oi abandoned Rome. . . V. i. 91. Abandoned, adj. absol. a deserted person. The outcast, \S\^ abandoned, the alone?. . . . Prom. II. iv. 105. Abandoning', pr. pple. departing from. Even as a ghost a5a«a&i«z'«|i' a bier, Adonais, xxiu. i^. Alike abandoned and abandoning (7n_f. Dr. 76. * Abandonment, n. (1) deserted condition, solace sought to bring In his abandonment ! . . Laon, v. xxi. ^. (2) solitude. to this Realm of abandonment Unf. Dr. 99. Abandons, v. tr. goes away from, an uninhabited sea-side Which the lone fi.sher, . . . Abandons; Julian, 9. Abased, //. brought low in mind or body. Thy worshippers abased, here kneel for pity, . . Laon, x. xxix. 3. Abate, v. I. ir. lessen. More need of words that ills abate; — . .... M. W. G. V. 3. IL intr. grow less. If thirst of knowledge shall not then a5a/(f, . . . Triumph, i():^. Abbey, as adj. pertaining to an Abbey. Upon the Abbey towers Ch. 1st, IV. 8. Till the abbey bell struck One : St. Ir. (3) VIII. 2. Abel, n. the son of Adam and Eve. Of the story of Cain and Abel. Devil, xvill. 4. Cries like the blood o( Abel from the dust ; . . Hellas, 355. t Abettors, «. assistants or encouragers. Upon the abettors of their own resolve ; . . . . Cenci, v. i. 26. Abhorred, //. looked upon with detestation. Do poets, but to be abhorred . . . Consume their spirits' oil ? Peter, VI. viii. 3. And those foul shapes, abhorred hy god and man. Prom,, ill. iv. 180. Abhorred, ///. adj. much hated, detested. The aMfjrr^d? cross glimmered behind Hellas, $01. And the abhorred cross — 638. bind all human hearts in its repose abhorred . . Laon, ix. xxiii. 9. Of what makes life foul, cankerous, and aMor^^ofy Ode Lib. xv. 13. To those a6/»(?rr^rf embraces doomed, .... RosaL 510. ^Abhorrence, n. detestation, hatred. Hide thee from my abhorrence ; Cenci, IV. i. 13. Thefiery-visagedfirmamentexpressed.(4Morr^K«, Q. Mab, vil. 88. Abhorrest, v. tr. lookest on with disgust. what thou abhorrest May mock thee, . . . Cenci, III. i. 130. Abhors, v. tr. looks on with horror. for what she most a^^fprj Shall have a fascination IV. i. 85. Her image mixed with what she most abhors, . IV. i. 148. many a rite which Earth and Heaven abhors'. . Laon, X. vii. 9. Abide, v. ititr. (1) remain, continite. her beams within abide, Hom. Moon, 9. Their dishonour a remembrance to a^/iafe.' . . . Hellas, 1015. Would rest, with looks entreating to abide, . . Laon, II. xxvi. 8. Which in their hollow hearts dared still abide; . ix. xvi. 5. And as I must on earth abide Awhile, . . . Magnet. Lady,V .T. I spoke to none, nor did abide^ Rosal. 523. peace On all who heard him did abide, .... 642. And least of strength and beauty did abide. . . Triumph, 543. (2) dwell. thick woods where sylvan forms abide ; .... Epips. 43^. 'Twere sweet 'Mid stars and lightnings to abide, Rosal. 54^. Where in bright bowers immortal forms abide . Witch, LXII I. 7. (3) rest. In lonely peace he could no more abide, .... Laon, IV. x. 3. (4) continue to exist. No thought of living spirit could abide, .... Witch, XII. 4. (5) submit to, be subject to. His presence he would not abide. Devil, VIII. 4. and to abideThaX blasting curse men had no shame — Laon, II. iv. 4. Yet even on earth must he abide The vengeance Rosal. 865. Abides, v. intr. has place, exists. when Torments, . . . Can break the heart where it [virtue] abides Hellas, 978. Abject, n. the slave. Became, worse fate, the abject of his own, . . . Prom. III. iv. 140. Abject, adj. low in mind and body. but deemed that fate Which made them abject, . Laon, iv. ix, 4. B ABJECTIfl^ESS— ABSOLVED. *Abjectness, n. degradation, misery, where'er in abjectness Woman with . . . her tyrant dwells, Laon, ll. xlii. 3. a gilded chain That binds his soul to abjectness, Q. Mab, ill. 31. - ■ ■ III. 87. III. 191. IV. 138. IV. 159. V. 33- Faust, II. 158. . Horn. Merc. xii. 6. xxvm. 8. LXII. 7. Laon, VII. xxxviii. 8. . Ode to Heaven, 20. . St. Ir. (i) IV. 4. Laon, VII. xli. 5. XII. XXXV. 4. St. Epips. 135- Take pleasure in his abjectness, submissive abjectness destroyed Nature's sug- gestions ? doomed To abjectness and bondage ! Or he is formed for abjectness and woe, .... Dead to all love but of its abjectness, .... Abjnre, v. tr. forswear, or renounce. thou wouldst, if thou couldst feel. Abjure such envious fame — Otho II. 2. Able, adj. strong, vigorous. An able sow, with old Baubo upon her, Able, adj. competent, capable. . than I am able To catalogize Gisb. 55. for he Is able to persuade all easily Horn. Merc. LXVII. 8. Each able to make a thousand wounds, .... CEdipus, I. 159. Abode, V. intr. had place, existed. the pools, in which abode The calm and darkness Witch, XLI. 3. Abode, //. stayed, remained. and where have you abode All the long night, Horn. Merc. xxvi. 6. Abode, n. A. Lit. a dwelling place, haven of rest. Beacons from the abode where the Eternal are. . Adonais, LV. 9. AH things in that sweet abode Bug. Hills, 368. And safely stalled in a remote abode — . To spend our lives in this obscure abode. To my abode, seeking his heifers there, . and my bright abode Before me yawned- Heaven ! for thou art the abode .... She swiftly advanc'd to my lonesome abode. B. Fig. (1) a mental abiding place. leads,through toil and hate, to Fame'sserenea5o^i?. Adonais, v. 9. That leads to Sorrow's most obscure abode . . Fr. Mary, i. 5. bear me to thine abode Hellas, 955. (2) stay, rest. The foam of streams that cannot make abode. Which flieth forth and cannot make abode. Which makes in mortal hearts its h\\^{ abode. Abodes, n. dwelling places, illuming the abodes Of mortal men Horn. Sun, 1 1. Who live secure in their unseen abodes. .... Horn. Venus, 34. The mortal tenants of earth's dark ' of the wrong IV. iv. 186. And art thou the flcCMJ^r .^ V. ii. 132. Accuser, witness, judge. What, all in one? . . V. ii. 175. Who stands here As my acc«.s:£r .■* V. ii. 174. Like an accuser branded with the crime . . . Ginevra, 91. and care Even for this hard accuser — . . . Horn. Merc. LXiv. 7. (2) n. in apposition, Fig. that thought Shall fee the accuser conscience. . Cenci, II. ii. 120. Accusers, n. pi. of Accuser (1). Upon the accusers from the criminal : . . . . 11. ii. 66. Accusing', ///. adj. guilt Imputing. Even now the accusing Angel waits to hear . . iv. i. 35. Accustomed,//. (1) used, wont. He was accustomed to frequent my house ; . . I. i. 62. (2) Fig. used. The wine is well accustotned to my hand . . . Cycl. 576. Accustomed, ///. adj. (1) ordinarj', usual. Unmindful each of their accustomed strife . . . Epips. 302. For ea-ch accustomed xXsitor: — Jane, Invitn, yt. Hovering in verse o'er its accustomed prey ; . . Ode Lib. I. 9. Remit, O Queen ! thy accustomed rage ! . . . CEdipus, II. li. 99. Much stolen of its accustomed flarae • .... Peter, VI. xxi. 3. still broods On her accustotned bough, .... Rosal. 143. (2) familiar. The accustomed nightingale still broods .... 142. Aclied, V. intr. felt pained or distressed. Mine eyes and my heart ached, Laon, VI. Hi. 6. Achieve, v. tr. (1) accomplish, carry out. None but that which I may achieve myself, . . Cenci, il. ii. 44. And other glorious actions to achieve Horn. Merc. 11. 8. All that . . .nope can paint or suffering may achieve, Julian, 45. (2) attain, ensure. You may achieve my safety and your own . . . Cycl. 423. Achieved, //. accomplished. From the dread manner of her wish achieved : . Cenci, 11. ii. 151. Acorn, n. the fruit of the oak. Dodona's forest to an acorn's cup Hellas, 793. Acquaintance, n. (1) friendship. I never make acquaintance with the dead. . . . Faust, I. 80. (2) those whom they know personally. Their acquaintance in the street Mask, Lxxxvil. 4. Acquaintances, n. persons known to one. as I Have no acquaititances in Antioch, .... Calderon, l. 80. Acquit, V. tr. declare free from guilt. Earth and Heaven, consenting arbiters. Acquit our deed Cenci, IV. iv. 25. Acquits, V. tr. declares innocent. The . . . heart of every boar acj'za/?'o» II- 2-I-5- Admire, v. tr. wonder. Thou wilt admire how I could e'er address . . Julian, 463. Admired, v. tr. looked on with approval. whom all the world Admired, Calderon, ill. 92. Admired, //. heard with approval. Many divinest sounds have I admired . . . Horn. Merc. Lxxv. 3. Admiring', ///. adj. regarding with wondering approval. nobler than The envious and a^/wzV/w^multitude. Ch. 1st, I. 148. Was led amid the admiring company .... Ginevra, 99. Admiring", pr. pple. wondering. Some few admiring what can ever lure .... 34. ^Admission, n. entrance. Had never gained admission here Falsehood, 36. Admit, V. tr. (1) agree to, allow. That I admit; Calderon, I. 153. (2) allow to enter. So warm, that to admit the dewy breeze, . . . Lion, IV. iii. 3. Admonish, v. tr. warn, caution. We pray thee and admonish thee with freedom, Cycl. 267. Ado, n. hesitation, difficulty. Without more ado He cut up fat and flesh, . . Horn. Merc. xx. 3, Of which Priests make such aa'i? Mask, \.\'in. ^.' *Adonais, n. a name given by Shelley to John Keats. I weep for Adonais — he is dead ! Adonais, I. i. O, weep for Adonais! I. 2. say: with me Died ^ whom I love, . n. Which dear Adonis had been doomed to pay, . Wilch, LXVII. 6. Adoration, n. worship. before his shrine forever In adoration bend, . . Dcemon, II. 20. Adorations, n. worshipijers. And others came . . . Desires and Adorations, . Adonais, xiii. i. Adore, v. I. tr. A. Lit. worship as God. Him whom we all adore, — Loon, X. xxxv. 7. B. Fig. (1) pay devotion to. To adore that sacred flame Eug: If ills, 262. (21 bow down before. Of all the crowd, which thither to adore him . . Laon, V. xs.\. 3. Adore thee present or lament thee lost Zucca, V. 8. II. intr. worship in a secondary sense. To bend, to tremble, and adore , Calderon, II. 6. Adored, pp. worshipped in secondary sense. To change and be adored for ever, Fr. Moon, 3. O too soon adored, by me ! ....,.,. Epips. 132. Adored, ppl. adj. much loved and admired. my adored Nightingale ! — — la Adores, v. tr. (1) worships at. many a saint Whose heart adores the shrine . . Witch, XV. 6. (2) admires beyond measure. Echoes and shadows of what Love adores In thee, Prol. Hellas, 99, Adoretli, v. intr. worships. Even now my heart a^(;rza/, delicately twined Hom. Sun, 19. And the cetherial shapes which are suspended . iMon, II. v. 2. Shedding soft dews from her cetherial wings ; . . IX. xxi. 6. And heavenly gestures suit cethereal melody. . . M. N. Ravail, 32. (4) air piercing. ^therial mountains shone around — Laon, I. xlviii. 7. from yon cetherial tower Pront. 1. 275. (5) delicate, fairy-like. across the sweep Of the cetherial waterfall, . . Mont B. 26. woof of cetherial p&arl Prom. IV. 223. Through that cetherial drapery Rosal. 1060. With its cetherial vans— Witch, XLV. 3. (6) unearthly, supernatural. like the standard Of some a?M«r/a/ host ; . . . Naples, 46. Daemons and Gods, jEtherial Dominations, . . Prom. iv. 530. a dun and faint cetherial gloom Triumph, 92. And underneath cetherial g\ory clad • 442. (7) spiritual (?) the meaning of the fragment is very obscure. Wait for thine cs//;£^/a/ lover ; Fr. Roman's,l. 2. '''JEtherially, adv. airily. An antelope . . . Were less cetherially light : . . Epips. 77. 2:tliiop, n. the .Ethiopian army. The jEthiop has intrenched himself in Sennaar, . Hellas, 582. JEtMop, n. a native of Ethiopia. the jEthiop there Wound his long arms .... Laon, VII. ix. 6. Left Plague her banquet in the jEthiop''s hall, . IX. xvii. 5. ♦.JBthiopia, n. a district of Africa. Dark viS'M/b/ia in her desert hills Alastor, ii^. out of the mountains Of utmost jEthiopia, . . . CEdipus, I. 155. old Nilus, where he threads Egypt and ^Ethiopia, Witch, LVII. 3. 2:tliiopian, adj. pertaining, belonging to, or forming part of .Ethiopia. shades the springs of ./Ethiopian Nile, .... Laon, VI. xl. 6. The JEthiopian vultures fluttering fell .... X. xvi. 2. Like a green isle 'mid .Ethiopian sand, .... Marenghi, VI. 3. Drenchmg yon secret ^Ethiopian dells, .... Son. Nile, 2. JEtna, n. the largest volcano in Europe. jEtna, the loftiest peak in Sicily. Cycl. 107. Absent on jEtna, hunting with his dogs. . . . 123. under the roots Of jEtna and its crags, .... 282. who inhabit A village upon jEtna 444. as with its thrilling thunaer Vesuvius wakens ..^/wa, Ode Lib. xiii. 3. ♦iEtnean, adj. of Mount .^tna or pertaining thereto. And drove us to this wild ./Etnean rock ; . . . Cycl. 23. Whence coming, they arrive the jEtnean hill . . 86. The Cyclops jEtnean is cruel and boldj .... 351. the jaws Of axes for ^tnean slaughterings. . . 387. Vulcan, jEtnean king ! 603. Burn and blind The JEtnean hind ! 665. To fabulous Solyma, and the uEtnean Isle, . . CEdipus, I. 169. ▲far, adv. (1) to a great distance. driven ajar By the strange madness, Cycl. 4. shot forth ajar, clear beams of light ; Hom. Sun, 15. We drag ajar from pastoral vales the fairest . . Laon, viil. xxv. i. And we sail on away, ajar, Prom. 11. v. 88. and dreaming still, he crept ajar — Witch, XXX. 5. (2) widely, on all sides, to a distance, that maiden who had reared The torch of Truth afar Laon, IV. xxxiv. 2. Of the flowers whose hues they bear o/ary . . . Sensit. PI. I. 81. her soft smiles shone afar Witch, v. 6. (3) from a long distance. From a/ar The populous constellations .... Prom. III. iv. 7. when from ajar The ministers of misrule sent, . Rosal. 856. (4) in the distance, far away. Ajar the melancholy thunder moaned, .... Adon. XIV. J. ajar O'er the wide wild abyss two meteors shone, Laon, I. xxvi. 2. Afar the Contadino's song is heard, Gisb. 286. (5) not belonging to, out of. something ajar From the sphere of our sorrow ? . One word, II. 7. (6) widely in realms of thought. I am borne darkly, fearfully, ajar ; Adonais, LV. 6. Affair, n. a dispute or difference. to compose the a.^/r by arbitration Hom.MerCLXVl.S, Affairs, n. (1) doings, concerns. To interest thyself in our a^iW — Faust, 1. yi. Devising schemes for the affairs of mortals — . Hom. Merc. LXV.5. that he will stir In our a^zVj;— Peter, Vll.iv. ,^. (2) occupations, business. The following morning urged by my affairs . . Julian, 582. Affected, ///. adj. pretended. and his affected chdiVity, . . . What palpable deceit ! Q. Mab, VI. 66. Affection, n. love between individuals. Of such a^f^c/ww and unbroken faith Cenci, III. i. 312. Thankless affection led me to this point, .... V. i. 62. With an orphan's affection Hellas, 98. Gathered them both into familiar Affection sweet, — Hofn.Merc.uoiXVl.'j. And finds torn the soft ties to affection so dear. . St. Ir. (5) I. 8. High swell'd in her bosom the throb of a^c^w«, (6) II. i. And the mind the mild joys of a^c^iow is proving, (6)11.7. visions clear. Of deep affection and of truth sincere. Witch, LXXVU. 8. On affections bloodless shrine Mary, whodied, ill. 4. :|:Affectioiiate, adj. loving. And with a^f/wwa/« discourse begfuiled ._. Mother^ Son,v\.C). Affections, n. disposition towards anything. The affections of the actors in the scene .... Calderon, I. 164. Have moved the affections by this mediation . . I. 174, the mail of tried affections wove Laon, ix. vii. 7. That their affections and antipathies, . . . produce the laws Q. Mab, ll. 235. Afflict, V. tr. (1) trouble, torment mentally. Thus to afflict my heart ? Calderon, ill. 38 (2) hurt physically. and afflict me with keen hail. ...... . Prom. I. 43. Afflicted, ppl. adj. distressed in mind. And the afflicted one . . . questioning . . . Dante Conv. 32. Affliction, n. trouble, distress. the a^zir/ww of vain breath: Triumph, 61. Afflicts, V. tr. grieves, troubles. which ajii5'«ir/.y my heart and soul .Calderon, 111. no. Afford, V. tr. (1) provide, bestow, furnish. Did thine own mind afford no scope Of love, . . Coleridge, 21. afford A plea for sating the unnatural thirst . . Q. Mab, vi. 127. AFFORDED— AGE. So fair ... a sight As the eternal temple could afford. Daemon^ I. 216. As Mab's etherial palace could afford. ... Q. Mab, II. 29. (2) mayst with reason. thou canst afford to weep Unf. Dr. 46. Afforded, v. tr. gave to. the milder zone afforded man A seeming shelter, DcBtnon^ II. 128. ,, n >. >> Q- Mab, VIII. 187. Affords, V. tr. produces, provides, furnishes. world affords Of grace, or majesty, or mystery ;— Alastor, 482. whose kafy dome affords A temple Q. Mab, VI. 209. f Affray, n. (1) combat. in ghastly affray With a sea-snake Vis. Sea, 137. (2) alarm, terror. sudden tumult and affray Arose, Laon, XI. xix. 3. Affrisrlit, V. I. tr. A. Lit. alarm, disturb. Their earth-convulsing wheels affright the city ; . Hellas, 324. B. Fig. the thunder-balls The day affright Calderon, 11. 27. II. intr. alarm. Curls, to seize or to affright ; Faust, 11. 74. f Affrisfht, n. sudden fear. they shrunk with affright from his ugly sight, . . Devil, VI. 4. The owls fly out in strange o^rz^f/i// Faust, 11. i2j. Affrigflited, ///. adj. Fig. disturbed, troubled. It sweeps into the affrighted seay Serchio, 100. Afraid, adj. (1) fearful of. Was as much afraid of ghosts as any, .... Fr. Ghst. Sty. 5. (2) (derisively). but, as I am afraid. The Quarterly would bait you St. Epips. 52. Africa, n. the third great division of the world. The Anarchies of Africa unleash Hellas, 299. *Aft, adj. stem. And stow the eatables in the aft locker Serchio, 74. *Aft, adv. turned backwards. So that the tracks which seemed before, were aft; Horn. Merc. xiii. 4. After, adj. subsequent, later. in after times her spirit free Knew what love was. Witch, Lxviii. 1. After, adv. later in time. We look before and a//«r, And pine for what is not: Skylark, 86. Answer from all their clouds and billows, echoing after. Prom. iv. 337. After, prep. (1) following in succession of time. wildly he wandered on. Day after day, .... Alastor, 245. After the funeral all our kin Assembled, . . . Rosal. 457. Cold as a corpse after the spirit's flight Zucca, iv. 7. (2) following in position. In dormitories ranged, row after row, .... Witch, lxiv. 3. (3) after the interval of. .<4/jtermany years And many changes I returned; Julian, 583. That after many wondrous years were flown, . . Lmoh, I. xlvi. 5. (4) later than a point of time. Such as we used, in summer after six, .... Serchio, 78. after the birth of night Zucca, IV. 8. (5) following upon. And fl/?«r long and vain endurance Love, Hope, \\. one moment's good After long pain — .... Jane, Invitn, 45. (6) for, in pursuit of. Thy thirst for tears — thy hunger after go\A. — . . Ld. Ch. xii. 2. (7) in the manner of, according to a/?«r this strain He ever communes with himself again, _/i!, VUl. 71. Aged, adj. (l^i old, time-stricken. Of this quaint show of ours, my a^£j.' . . . . Julian, ^i^. the slow agonies Of legal torture mocked his keen desire : Laon, x. xxxiv. 2. Ah! no, the of^w/^j that swell This panting breast, M. N. Melody, g. His slumbers are but varied o^ow/Vj Q. Mab, 111. 7 j. (2) bodily anguish. My parched skin was split with piercing agonies. Laon, III. xviii. 9. like agonies Stifled afar — xi. xiii. 5. (3) excitements. Gave strength to bear those gentle agonies, . . Love, Hope, 35. (4) pangs. He shudders in death's latest agonies; . . . . M. N. Post. Fr. 8. The ajivwzWj of anguish and of death Medusa, 1.^. (5) modes of torture. The powers who scheme slow agonies in Hell, . Prom. I. 367. (6) {salir.) Where small talk dies in agonies; — Peter, III. xii. 4. *Agoniz'd, ppl. a. torturing. Were delights to his agonis'd pain, St. Jr. (3) VII. 3. ^Agonizing, (1) torturing. The shrieks of a^o«?>«'w^ death, . ...... ^. A/izJ, ni. 183. (2) frantically exciting. They, tortured by their a^(7«j>«'«^ pleasure, . . Triumph, i\^. Agony, n. A. Lit. (1) death struggle. his solemn agony had not Yet faded from him ; . Adonais, XLV. 4. the corpses in stark agony lying, Laon, xil. i. 5. In the death hues of agony Peter, VI. xxvi. i. He who made his agony The barrier to your else all-conquering foe Prom. I. 118. (2) anguish of mind or body in others. I love The sight of a^(j«ji| Cenci, 1. '\. iz. Whose sport is in his agony Q. Mab, ill. 203. the solace of all woe Is turned to deadliest agony, V. 190. Has been tracked by despair and agony. . . . P'alsehood, 20. (3) mental anguish. and Venus hangs in agony there Bion. Adon. 8. That faith no agony shallobscure in me .... Cenci, III. i. 102, Oh, agony of fear ! IV. iv. 25. The limbs in chains, the heart in agony, .... Epips. 406. In the waters of wide Agony : Eug. Hills, 6j. In the sea of life and agony : 336. With agony, with sorrow, and with pride, . . . Ginevra, 48. Or all would sink in this keen agony — .... Julian, 361. Shouldst rain these plagues of blistering agony — ■ 453. can I dissemble The agotty of this thought? . . Laon, 11. xlvii. 4. That if I loved before, now love was agony. . . III. iii. 9. did agony wreak Its whirlwind rage : III. vii. 7. and she tore Her locks in agony VII. v. 6. She told me what a loathsome agony VII. vi. i. Transformed into the agony which I wore . . . VII. xv. 8. the hot atmosphere Of his blind agony, .... XI. viii. 6. I fell in agony on the senseless ground XII. xxv. 3. And canst thou mock mine a^tiwji, M.N. Despair, i. Awhile it stills the tide of fl^owjv 14. And canst thou not contend with a^<7w_y, . . . M.N. Fragmt. 21. A fiercer, deadlier o^owy.' M.N. Melody, ^y. Who, shrieking in agony, M. N. Spec. Hors. 54. The scorned load of agony M.W'.G.n.6. Leaped up from the deck in agony, Prom. 1. 96. There is no agony, and no solace left ; . . . . I. 819. And narrow verge of crag-like agotiy, .... — — IV. 560. Struggling with whirlwinds of mad o^owj", . . . Q. Mab, \ll. 2^^. Thou knowest not, thou canst not know V[.y agOny. Rosal. 224. The secrets of my agony ; 494. And he sate in mute agony still ; St. Ir. (3) VI. 3. If it be but a world of a^owj;- — ....... Triumph, 2^^. In the a^ow_v of terror, Vis. Sea, \i. (4) a mental struggle. This fl^owj/ Of passion . Calderon,\\i.iog. Let him not fear the agony of sighs Dante Conv. 25. (5) bodily anguish. and wrest Self-accusation from our agony! . . . Cenci, IV. iv. 171. nor, though the Sun Its shafts of agony kindling . Laon, III. xx. 3. upon the other's face In helpless agony gazing ; . X. xv. 6. Seeking to quench the agotiy of the flame, . . . x. xxi. 5. Then in agonyxo\\\\\Bd^a\!i\-s-^\vi\ra\r\ge.ye.-\>2X\s,M.N.Spec.Hors.^i. Might then have charmed his a^(7W)» Magnet. Lady 11. j. By this imperial crown of a^owjVi Prol. Hellas, %C). Have its deaf waves not heard my agony } . . . Prom. 1. 29. And thus devote to sleepless agony, i. 280. A robe of envenomed a^iJWjV/ I. 289. So from our victim's destined agony i. 470. Crawling like agony i. 491. Drops of bloody agony flow i. 564. Far worse than fire's brief o^owjV Rosal. 511. (6) extreme or brutal rage. Over his loathed meal, laughing in agony, raves. Laon,ii. xxxvi. 9. B. Fig. (1) and with the agony With which it clings , . . . Cenci, III. i. 250. Like the last glare of day's red agony, .... Prom. ill. ii. 7. C lO AGREE— Am. (2) intensity or paroxysm of pleasure. Like forms which sculptors carve, then love to agony. Laon, X.xxiii.g. Agrree, v. intr. harmonize. with whom these marks and signs Fitly agree . . CaMeron, I. 56. Agreed, v. intr. concurred in tliinking. And we agreed his was some dreadful ill ... Julian., 525. Agrees, v. intr. consents. Your father there within agrees to it, Cycl. 428. ♦Agriculturist, n. a farmer. The Devil was an agriculturist^ Devil., V. i. Ah I interj. (1) in lamentation. Ah I no, I cannot shed the pitying tear, . . . M. N. Frag. 28. ./4^, smiles and joyance quickly died, Rosal. 6()i. (2) in surprise. Ah/ whence yon elare That fires the arch . . . Q. Mab, IV. 33. (3) meditatively. ^/; / to the stranger-soul, when first it peeps . . iv. 121. *AIiasuerus, n. (1) a character in Hellas, representing the Wandering Jew. Then mustthe lonely helmsman cryaloud.i4^aj«<«r«J.' Hellas, 174. and the caverns round Will answer Ahasuerus ! 175. (2) one of the speakers in Q. Mab, also represented as the Wandering Jew. Ahasuerus, rise ! Q. Mab, Vii. 6"]. Ahasuerus fled Fast as the shapes of .... Vii. 268. *Ai, interj. an exclamation or interjection of despair. Ai! Aif The elements obey me not Prom. III. i. 79. Aid, V. tr. (1) assist to depart. what thou must do to aid us hence ? Cycl. 124. (2) help. Cowardly dogs ! ye will not aid me then ? . . . 646. Aid, n. (1) help, comfort, countenance. For we cannot hope That aid, or retribution, . . Cenci, III. i. 204. I will use the a?rf Of my own comrades— . . . Cycl.6~,\. I — I do all : without my aid Falsehood, 85. thy toil ana pain. Without my aid, were more than vain ; 106. What hope of refuge, or retreat, or aid) .... Hellas, 387. Ye turn to God for aid Laon, XI. xvi. i. but for thy aid. Religion ! Q. Mab, VI. 68. (2) assistance to a particular purpose. I'll call an Ignis-fatuus to our aid : Faust, 11. 22. Bore down from Naxos to our aid, Hellas, 500. As price of tardy aid. 585. if such azV/ he could be taught ; Z^atiw, VII. xxix. 8. *Aigli, interj. intended to represent the grunt of a pig. Aigh, aigh, aighl CEdipus, I. 19. Ails, V. tr. troubles or afflicts. What ails thee, my poor child ? Cenci, III. i. 33. Aim, n. purpose, design. Which know no aiin beyond the archer's wit, . . Ch. ist, II. 106. Each with undeviating aim Dcemon, I. 250. Then, had no great aim recompensed my sorrow, Laon, II. xix. i. Each with undeviating aim., Q. Mab, II. 80. ^Aimless, adj. purposeless. like aimless arrows from his ear — Pr. Athan. I. 53. Air, n. (1) the atmosphere which surrounds the earth con- sidered as a whole or as a separate element. the amorous Deep Will yet restore him to the vital air; Adonais, III. 8. and thou Air Which like a mourning veil . . . XLI. 6. By man and beast and earth and air and sea, . LIV. 6. Earth, ocean, air, beloved brotherhood ! . . . Alastor, i. May modulate with murmurs of the air, : . . 46. And sound from the vast earth and ambient air, 69. wasting these surpassing powers In the deaf air, 289. motionless. As their own voiceless earth and vacant air. 662. and the air Leaves the green earth Apollo, 11. 5. O, thou most silent air, Cenci, I. i. 141. deadlier gloom Than the earth's shade, or inter- lunar air, II. i. 190. The air Is changed to vapours III. i. 14. Free as the earth-surrounding air; IV. iv. 49. the north wind reigns in the upper air. .... Ch. 1st, IV. 10. When the powers of the air Cloud, 69. Build up the blue dome of a«>, 80. And fed with love, like air and dew, Its growth— Constant. II. 5. Whilst, like the world-surrounding air, .... Con. Sing. IV. 2. 'twixt Heaven, Air, Earth, and Sea, Epips. 4>>7. Bounded by the vaporous air, E!ug. Hills, 92. That the spirits of the air, 353. The children of the wind rage in the air! . . . Faust, II. 118. Sir Urian is sitting aloft in the air; II. 150. To track along the lapses of the air Fr. Silence, 7. If the land, and the air, and the sea, Ginevra, 202. A cloud-encircled meteor of the azV, Gisb.'io-j. Fills the void, hollow, universal ai? — .... 256. The Powers of earth and air Hellas, 230. We met the vultures legioned in the a/>-. . . . ' Si'i- And saw two hosts conflicting in the air, . . . 608. that gem The sapphire floods of interstellar a»>, . 771. The lampless air glows round her golden crown. Horn. Moon 7 living thmgs That fleet along the air, .... Horn. Venus, 5. the lovely forests grew As in the upper air, . . Janie, Recoil'. 62. between Earth and the upper a., the vast clouds fled, Laon, I. iv. For in the air do I behold indeed An Eagle and a Serpent I. viii. 3. And startled with its yells the wide azVj solitude. I. viii. 9. Drooped thro' the air ; I. x. 5. in the void air, far away. Floated I. xi. 5. And filled with silver sounds the overflowing air. I. xviii. 9. whichcleaves with arrowy beams the dark-red azV, I. xxi. 4. who have blended The colours of the air . . . II. v. 5. which rent The air from all its fanes, II. viii. 8. Which wanders thro' the waste air's pathless blue, II. xxiii. 5. Thro' the air and over the sea we sped, .... III. v. 2. SwaA'ed in the a«y .• III. xvi. 3. kindling thro' the air Moved over me, .... ill. xx. 3. At last, when daylight 'gan to fill the air, . . . v. iv. 8. and thro' the air Her thrilling gestures spoke, . v. li. 12. The dwellers of the earth ana azr v.Song,e^.(). And on the earth and on the vacant air, . . . VI. xlvii. 4. Among the closing waves out of the boundless az'r. VII. ix. 9. songswhichintheazVLikehomelessodoursfloated, ix. xii. 7. and^the air Groaned with the burthen .... x. xvii. 4. on the cold bosom of the air, XII. xxiii. 5. Made the azV sweep in whirlwinds xil.xxxix.5. In earth and air and sea, Love, Hope, 5. But fairer than the spirits of the a/r, M. N. Ravail, '},'>,. I know the secrets of the air, Mar. Dr. I. 3. She saw aloft in the morning air, IV. 2. The air was calm as it could be, V. 3. Filling the wide air far away ; xi. 2. When storm and snow are in the air. .... Mask, XLIX. 4. Whilst in the air a ghastly bat, Medusa, IV. 3. inchantest The mutinous air and sea : . . . . Naples, 55. And they will see her flying- through the air, . . QSdipus, I. 394. but that child Of Earth and Air Pan, Echo, 2. The air, the winds of many wings, Peter, vil. xix. 3. Of whose soft voice the air expectant seems — . .Pr. Athan. 11. iii. 5. The sapphire space of interstellar az'y; Prol. Hellas, l(). Thou serenest Air, Thro' which the Sun walks . Prom. i. 64. Mountains, and caves, and winds, and yon wide air, I. 182. Even as the tremulous air: 1. 523. Thronging in the blue air! I. 666. Looks radiant as the air around a star. . . . I. 693. Twin nurslings of the all-sustaining air .... I. 754. Their soft smiles light the air like a star's fire. . I. 762. that wings the wide air's wildernesses, .... I. 764. It walks not on the earth, it floats not on the air, I. 773. Like a tempest thro' the air; I. 786. The printless air felt thy belated plumes. . . . II. i. 34. Hear'st thou not sounds i' the air ' II. v. "35. Like the wide heaven, the all-sustaining air, . . II. v. 42. Past floating thro' the air, III. iv. 67. With sphered fires the interlunar air.^ .... III. iv. 94. Winnowing the lightsome azVwith languid plumes, III. iv. 107. The voice of the Spirits of Air and of Earth . . IV. 57. And Earth, Air, and Light, iv. 147. and through the windless air. IV. 205. The music of the living grass and air, .... IV. 257. Happy globe of land and air, IV. 326. the deep air's unmeasured wildernesses, . . . iv. 336. Music is in the sea and air, iv. 366. The tempest is his steed, he strides the air; . . IV. 421. and from within the air Bursts, IV. 512. Meteors and mists, which throng air's solitudes : IV. 547. As that which reined the coursers of the air, . . Q. Mab, i. 76. Again the coursers of the air Unfurled .... I. 203. As from the all-surrounding air Rosal. 729. That walk the air on subtle wings, 965. Till the night-stars shone through the cloudless a/V, St. Ir. (3) VI. 4. And the Earth was all rest, and the air -was all love, Sensit. PI. I. 99. Like the lamps of the azV when night walks forth, 11. 11. As the winds did those of the upper air iii. 45. The earth, and the air, and the water bound ; . in. 95. The birds dropped stiff from the frozen air . . . ni. 104. Islanded in the immeasurable air. Serchio, 45. Hear how it sings into the air. 60. All the earth and air Skylark, 26. Encompassing the earth, air, stars, and sea ; . . Summer-Evg. 8. I heard alone on the air's soft stream Triumph, 97. Round the high moon in a bright sea oiair; . . 455. and the air Was peopled with dim forms, . . . 482. Bright are the regions of the air, Two Spirits, 5. See, the bounds of the air are shaken — .... 19. In the dark space of interstellar azy. Unf. Dr. 2y. the mixed thunder Of the azV and the sea, . . . Vis. Sea, 71. through the trackless air, Witch, ix. 3. Ride singing through the shoreless air; — . . . LV. 5. And sometimes to those streams of upper fliV . . LVI. i. Even if the air and sun had smiled not .... Zucca, X. 2. (2) the atmosphere we breathe, the air around us. And move like winds oflight on dark and stormy azV. ^(/i?Maw, XLFV. 9. thunder smoke Strangles the air, Calderon, II. 32. Has formed in the idle air) in. 105. as flame dies in the envious air, in. 147. Skilful in forming such in the vain air .... in. 166. With sports, and delicate food, and the fresh air. Cenci, n. i. 102. And from the all-communicating air. n. ii. 91. burst forth into the wandering air! in. i. 28. Of her stern brow bent on the idle air, .... m. i. 352. when the dim air Has drank this innocent flame, in. ii. 42. Be journeying on in this inclement air. .... Ch. 1st, I. 42. Rouse up the astonished air. i. 122. List how the music Grows on the enchanted air! i. 132. AIR— AIB-LIKE. II Whose sacred silent air owns yet no echo . . . Ch. ist^w.xx. And little motion in the air V. lo. In the pleasant air of noon, Constant. I. 2. Here the air is calm and fine Cycl. 47. Nay we are silent, and we chaw the air. .... 633. they stop and fold Their wings of braided air: . Dcetnon^ I. d-j. As the wild a»y stirs and sways Dirgefor Year^Ml.l. Stains the dead, blank, cold air Epips. 92. (as in a fleece of snow-like a;«V 99. Breathed but of her to the enamoured air; . . 205. the dull cold in the frore azV.' 334. Who from the Elysian, clear, and golden air . . 427. Or serene morning air/ 438. Washed by the soft blue Oceans of young air. . 460. In the windless air/ Eug. Hills^ 304. The bats are flitting fast in the grey air / . . . Even. Pisa, 1. 2. Camelions feed on light and azV.' Exhortation, l. Fed with human fat, polluted the air: .... Falsehood, 58. With poisonous war to taint the (Z/V." 80. the light bums soft as the enkindled air, . . . Faust, II. 102. And for your own take the inclement air / . . . Fr. Peo. Eng. 4. To the sound of azV low-breathing Fr. Pleas. 6. Hurling the damned into the mumy air . . . . Fr. Satire, 5. Of cloud which the wild tempest weaves in air, . Fr. Song, 2. And through the sunny air, Ginevra, 41. The ripe corn under the undulating air .... Gisb. 1 19. Trembles not in the slumbering air, 279. the clanging Of her wings through the wild air, . Hellas, 81. See how it trembles in the blood-red air, . . . 341. That soothed the silver clouds through the deep azV. 629. that fills the clear a/rthrillingly; .... Hofn.Merc.\JXJCV\l.\. drove The living spray along the sunny air . . Julian, 22. Through the black bars in the tempestuous air . • 223. made the air eloquent Laon, I. xxiv. 9. his slaves In air, and light, and thought, . . . I. xxx. 2. thrilling sounds that pierced the crystal air. . . I. liv. 9. when in their flow Thro' the bright air, .... I. lix. 5. the lulling air Of noon beside the sea, .... II. xxvii. 4. Chain one who lives, and breathes this boundless a/V II. xliii. 2. And the bright air o'er every shape did weave . III. iii. 3. And as we past thro' the calm sunny air . . . V. xvi. 5. thro' the air Sobs were then heard, V. xxxv. 5. filled the air With her strange name and mine, . v. xlv. 2. the wide air pierced and rent VI. xiii. 5. that filled the listening a/V. VI.xxviii.9. as sails to the dim air/ VI. xxix. 5. the golden stars of the clear azure air. .... VI. xxx. 9. Mixed with mine own in the tempestuous air, — . VI. xlii. 3. soft and sweet the pausing air did wake. . . . VII. ii. 9. made the earth seem fire, the sea seem air, . . VII. xv. 2. The eagle, and the fountain, and the air; . . . VII. xvi. 2. have preyed. Till it be thin as azVy Vll.xxvi. 6. Expiring in the frore and foggy air. — .... IX. xxv. 3. Peopling with golden dreams the stagnant air, . IX. xxxii. 7. the thirsting air did claim All moisture, .... X. xiii. 7. in the hot silence of the a?>-y X. xxiii. 5. the stainless air around XII. xvi. 2. in distant a^y the murmurs die, M.N. Despair, \^. 'mid the tumult of the battling azV, M.N.Fragmt.i-]. —athwart the murky air, M. N. Ravail, i. Serene is the breath of the balmy air, 93. And mingles its swell with the moonlight air. . M.N. Spec. Hors.62. There was a mist in the sunless air, Mar. Dr. VII. i. And she cried out in the air: Mask, XXII. 4. Till the dead air seems alive LXXVI. 2. motion-proof Against the air, Matilda, 7. The sacred hill obscures the morning air. . . . 12. and saw The solid air with many a ragged jaw. . Medusa, iii. 8. Which makes a thrilling vapour of the az> . . . V. 4. Breathes its swift vapours to the circling air. . . Mont B. 126. Because the crystal silence of the a^y Naples, 20. whose swift pinnace of dewy a/r 33. Hung in its cloud of all-sustaining a?y.- .... Ode Lib. u. ^. (Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air) . Ode W. Wind, 1. 1 r . Whose branches the air plays among, .... Orpheus, 29. Maenad-like waved his lyre in the bright air, . . 52. It ever flows and falls, and breaks the air . . . 77. and as soft a«y In spring, Pr.Athan.U.iv.12. Whose thin leaves trembled in the frozen air, . . Prom. I. 155. Vomits smoke in the bright air. I. 552. the air around them Looks radiant as the air around a star I. 692. Of woven cloud unravel in pale a?y." II. i.23. When there is heard thro' the dim air .... 11. ii. 36. Like clouds amid the yielding air. II. ii. 63. Where the air is no prism, II. iii. 74. Lures winged insects thro' the lampless air. . . II. iv. 162. Make the cold air fire ; . . . II. v. 51. Realms where the air we breathe is love, . . . 11. v. 95. And tho' my curses thro' the pendulous a?y, . . ill. i. 11. And as thy chariot cleaves the kindling air, . . ill. iii. 79. whose marble smiles Fill the hushed air .... in. iii. i^. When work is none in the bright silent air.> . . III. iv. 29. Kmdling within the strings of the waved azr, . . IV. 187. As the sharp stars pierce winter's crystal air . . IV. 192. Tempering the cold and radiant air around, . . iv. 229. Celestial coursers paw the unyielding air/ . . . Q. Mab, I. 60. sleep on the moveless a?y./ I. 121 «?u ■ u • ^^^ ^^^ '^^^^ • IX. 230. Which is twined in the sultry summer air . . . Rosal. 209. A.?/^,"^^ °^ ''Sht, and the warm air, 373. Mid the azure air is islanded '539 Amid the all-surrounding air, /? sal. 557. When the warm air weaves, 588. which made The air his hearers breathed delight : 794. And thro' the dense and murky air, 887. Then failing, soothes the azy again 11 11. The dusk and solid air was shaken, 1 144. Filled the frore air with unaccustomed light ; . . 1309. In air whilst the tide of the night-storm is rolling, St. Ir. (2) in. 3. No cloud along the spangled air, (4) 11. 1. dimly gleam'd through the tempested air/ . . (6) III. 2. Till, fold after fold, to the fainting azy . . . . Sensit. PI. 1. ^1. And stifled the air till the dead wind stank. . . ni. 57. And hour by hour, when the air was still, . . . in. 74. The stars burnt out in the pale blue air, .... Serchio, 7. And I might feel in the warm azy St. Dejection, rv.y. Lifts its bold head into the world's frore air, . . St. Epips. 67. Fail, like the trances of the summer air, . . . Sunset, 6. the tempest-proof Pavilions of the dark Italian air, 7"owerofFant. 14. odorous sighs up to the smiling air / Triumph, 14. in music through the enamoured air, ' 39. trembles amid crimson air, gj. Whose water, like clear a«y, ^le. The air which roughened the moist amethyst, . . 372. Obscure clouds, moulded by the casual air/ . . 532. And crept abroad into the moonlight air, . . . Unf. Dr. 191. And veined leaf in the azure odorous air. . . . 227. from the a?y Of clear morning, Vis. Sea, 116. Banded armies of light and of a/ry 119. Stain the clear air with sunbows ; 139. which the brands Of the tempest-shaken air . . W. Jew, (2) 7. as a flame Stirred by the air Witch, xi. 4. Were stored with magic treasures — sounds of air, xiv. 2. cataracts which shiver Their snow-like waters into golden air, xLII. 2. And then it winnowed the Elysian a/r XLV. i. The still air seemed as if its waves did flow . . XLVI. 3. The mitigated influences of a?y .Zucca, IK. 1. (3) out of doors, open air. I walk into the air (but no relief To seek,— Fr. My head is wild, 3. Who staggers forth into the air and sun .... Ginevra, 2. out in the giddy air. Leaning that I might eat, . Laon, in. xxv. 7. (4) outside the mouth. their tongues they lolled into the air, vi. xvi. 9. (5) particular climate. some diviner element Than English air, .... Ch. 1st, I. 147. that shy bird That gleams i' the Indian air— . . Gisb. 235. Through the wide c^sarts of Elysian a«y.'' . . . Fiordispina, 8t. (6) breath of the human body. and the thin air, my breath, was stained . . . Prom. I. 177. The sweet air that sustained me, n. i. 104. (7) a peculiar or imaginary atmosphere. they breathe an air. Thick, infected Peter, in. xxiii. I. Arid when these burst, and the thin fiery air, . . Prom. n. ii. 77. With a serener ligfht and crimson air Intense, . . in. iii. 133. the impalpable thin air m. iv. 100. (8) air in movement, a gentle breeze. The air of her own speed has disentwined, . . . Epips. 107. As trembling leaves in a continuous aiy.^ . . . 146. A killing air, which pierced like honey-dew . . . 262. A boat approached, borne by the musical air . . Laon, Xii. xx. 2. as a serpent's path, which the light air Erases, . Ode Lib. xv. 4. like plains of corn Swayed by the summer air/ . Prom. III. ii. 21. And there is heard the ever-moving air, .... in. iii. 18. Moved with the moving fl/r, Q. Mab, \. no. (9) sunrise. Looking towards the golden Eastern air, . . . Epips. 516. (10) as a figure of emptiness or nothingness. Repose trust in his footsteps of a«y.^ Bigotry, I. 4. And endued not with fast-fleeting footsteps of a/r, III. 2. Which mock the lips with air, when they are thirsting Fr. Unf. Tale, 4. Had past out of men's minds into the a/y. . . . Ginevra, i"]^. the air Closes upon my accents Julian, 508. And looked, — and all was empty air. Mask, XXX. 4. Thou speakest, but thy words Are as the air: . Prom. n. i. 109. yet 'tis a thing of air n. i. 129. (11) up above, overhead. fling their wild arms in air Triumph, 149. And hurling sucking pigs into the a?y," .... CEdipus, 1. ^^f). (12) as a separate or immaterial world. O! There are spirits of the a«y, Coleridge, i. The spirits of the air, the shuddering ghost, . . Q. Mab, VI. 83. I! 11 II It II II Superst. 12. Air, n. a tune. The melody of an old air, Rosal. 1098. *Air-l)oni, c. adj. produced by the air. How fair these air-born shapes ! and yet I feel . Prom. I. 807. *Air-clad, c. adj., surrounded by air. which did environ With a?y-c/aa? crags . . . . Marenghi,T!JiU.$. *Air.dissolv6d, c. adj. extinguished by contact with the earth's atmosphere. Or an air-dissolved star Eug. Hills, 289. *Air-feeding', c. adj. Fig. Hurries them fast from these air-feeding notes ; . Orpheus, 40. *Air-Uke, c. adj. (1) evanescent as air. the air-like waves Of wonder-level dream, . . . Epips. 195. C 3 t2 AIRS— ALL. (2) gently undulating, the Baian ocean Welters with airlike motion, . Naples, 27. Airs, n. iX) gentle wafting breezes. The airs and streams renew their joyous tone ; . Adonais, XVIII. 3. all the place is peopled with sweet airs; . . . Efips. 445. and breathing dew, And airs of evening ; . . . Guitar Jane, 74. And evening airs wander upon the wave ;'. . . Hellas, 169. The wandermg airs they faint Ind. Ser. II. i. light airs did play Among the dewy weeds, . . Laon, VII. i. 3. By the light airs of spring— Orpheus, 60. And haunted by sweet airs and sounds, . . . Prom. I. 830. shall creep The wakening vernal airs, .... Zucca, II. 6. (2) breezes, winds. That soul sustaining a/rj and blasts of evil . .Son. Nile, \\. The airs hiss and howl Faust, 11. 137. (3) Fig. influences. that cold light, whose airs too soon deform. . . Triumph, 468. Airs, n. tuneful melodies. let us go try These a!iV.y from Italy ; C7/. u/, II. 477. Airy, adj. (1) exposed to the winds. With wings folded I rest, on mine airy nest, . . Cloud, 43. It is as airy here as in a [ ] Faust, II. 404. (2) fine and thin as air. On the blue surface of thine fliVjc surge, . . . OdeW.Wind,W.^. (3) impalpably thin, shadowy. Distinctly seen through that dusk airy veil, . . Prom., iv. 212. (4) so light as to be almost imperceptible. And wherever her airy footstep trod, .... Sensit. PL 11. 25. *Aisles, n. (1) denoting far stretching divisions of a large hall or building, wound far away The long and labyrinthine aisles — Laon, I. liii. 3. rung Through all the long-drawn aisles. . . . Q. Mab, vil. 100. (2) denoting simply the interior. through the lone cathedral's roofless aisles . . IX. 103. (3) Fig. Thundering thro' all their ai.y/«.y .• Dcem-on, \\. 2\i. •Akin, adj. of one's own sort. Oh, might I be With company akin to me ! . . Faust, 11. 195. Alabaster, adj. (1) fine white semi-transparent marble. Sculptured on a/aSa.f/^r obelisk, Alastor, 113. (2) Fig. Pillowed upon its alabaster arms, Prom. IV. 262. Alarm, n. (1) a call to arms. Go search the castle round ; sound the alarm; Cenci, IV. iv. 53. (2) noise. Was roused last night by the alarm, of battle, . Hellas, 607. Alarms, n. sounds of fear. these alarms Came to me, Laon, VI. iii. 7. Alas, interj. (1) expressing lamentation on one's own account. Alas/ that all we loved of him should be, . . . Adonais, xxi. 1. But I, alas! am both unknown and old, . . . Laon, iv. xvii. 1. And we were such, alas the day ! Rosal. 262. (2) expressing pity for others. Alas! Poor boy, what else couldstthou have done? Cenci 11. i. 11. Alas for thee ! Image of the Above Hellas, 987. ^Albanian, adj. natives of Albania. The Arnaut, Servian, and Albanian allies . . . 368. *Albatross, 7t. a large sea-bird. Our bark is as an albatross, Epips. 416. And like an albatross asleep, Lerici, 4. Albion, n. ancient or poetic name for England. As Albion wails for thee : Adonais, xvil. 7. like the white shore Of Albion, free no more. . Castl. Adm. I. 5. That a tempest-cleaving Swan Of the songs of Albion,Eug. Hills, 175. Which thro' Albion winds for ever 185. Florence, Albion, Switzerland Hellas, 63. Alchemy, n. Fig. power of transmutation or renovation. O, for Medea's wondrous alchemy Alastor, 672. Of dewy morning's vital alchemy, Priiimph, 402. Alchymist, n. one who studies to transmute base metals to gold. Like an inspired and desperate alchymist . . . Alastor, 31. ^Aldermauic, n. such as Aldermen are credited with in- dulging in. Lunches and snacks so aldermanic Peter, III. xiii. i. *Aldobraiidino, n. nephew of the Pope. For which Aldobrandina owes you now . . . Cenci, I. i. 57. *Aldric, n. H. Aldrich, 1647-17 10, author of a treatise on logic. (This was learnt from Aldric's themes) . . . Peter, Prol. 10. *Alemaiinic, adj. German. Lest news Russ, Dutch, or Alemannic . . . III. xiii, 4. Aleppo, 71. a city in the North of Syria. Damascus, Hems, Aleppo Tremble ; — .... Hellas, 580. *Alfred, n. K. of England, y?. 849-901. On Saxon Alfred'' s olive-cinctured brow : . . Ode Lib. IX. 3. *Alsriers, n. a maritime city and territory of Northern Africa. For, as we thought, three frigates from Algiers . Hellas, 499. *Ali, n. Alee-Welee-Zade, commonly called Ali Pasha of Yanina, 1750-1822. The aged Ali sits in Yanina Hellas, 566. Not the sower, Ali—^\\o has bought a truce . . 576. ♦Alienated, ///. adj. changed, altered, estranged. His cold fireside and alienated home Alastor, 76. Alight, V. intr. (1) get down. As from the lofty steed she did alight, .... Laon, VI. xxiv. 4. (2) settle down, fall. To alig/it on midnight's dusky plain, Rosal. 1044. (3) set, go down. the sun paused ere it should alight, Julian, 53. 'I'Alig'lit, adj. burning, on fire. and when I see It is alight, Cycl. 458. Having the little brazen lamp alight, Julian, 553. Alighted, v. intr. arrived, stepped to the ground. As we alighted, wept to see Rosal. 994. Alike, adv. equally, in the same way. I may speak Alike to you and my own conscious heart — Cenci, I. i. 73. Shield'st alike the high and low Mask, lvii. 4. throbs .<4/zy^^ in every human heart Q. Mab,\\\. 2\6. Seeking, alike from happiness and woe, A refuge Ye hasten, \\. Alike abandoned and abandoning Unf. Dr. 76. *Alit, V. intr., poet. pa. t. of Alight. (1) reached its object. Almost before the thunderstone alit Hellas, 370. (2) settled as a bird. I alit On a great ship Prom.. I. 718. (3) fell lightly, settled. Every branch on which they alit Sensit. PI. ill. 80. (4) Fig. Another Splendour on his mouth alit, .... Adonais, xil. 1. *Alit, //. having settled. An eagle alit one moment may sit Cloud, 37. Alive, adj. A. Lit. (1) in the living state, living. And the worms be alive in her golden hair, . . Ginevra, 216. That you alive defend from magic power, . . . Horn. Merc. VI. 3. I then was nor alive nor dead : — Epips. 300. But he who both alive can hither bring, .... JJaon, x. xli. 8. Alive or dead — aye, sick or well— Peter, I. v. 3. I walked about like a corpse «/?'t'^.' Rosal. 7,12. and lumps neither alive nor dead. Witch, XI. 7. (2) adj. absol. living persons. Disgorged at length the dead and the alive , . Uwn, VI. vi. 7. B. Fig. (1) not extinguished, having power or energy. What! a/zV^ and so bold, oh earth ? Death Nap. \. ' Still alive and still bold,' shouted Earth, . . . 25. 'Aye, alive and still bold,' muttered Earth, . . 33. (2) burning, not extinguished. What spark is alive on thy hearth ? 10. (3) active. Or when free thoughts, like lightnings are alive; Laon. I. xxxiii. 3. like the distant sound Of a wind alive .... Mask, LXX. 4. had made alive The things it wrought on ; . . . Peter, IV. x. 3. (4) filled with life or motion. Till the dead air seems alive Mask, LXXVI. 2. (5) endued with immortality. and save Their souls alive : Q. Mab, VII. 143. (6) unforgotten. With food of saddest memory kept alive, . . . Adonais, XXVI. 5. All, n. (1) the whole. Mistake me not ! All is contained in each. . . Hellas, 792. she told me how All happened — Julian, 017. And one frail mortal's mandate governs all. . .M. N. Post. Fr. 50. (2 ) everything, whatever thing. He mocks and mimics all he sees and hears, . . Ch. 1st, II. 98. All we hope and all we love Finds a voice . . . Faust, II. 59. Of all that earth has been or yet may be, . . . Julian, 43. (3) every one, people generally. I heard as all have heard, life's various story, . Laon, II. ix. i. Then all cried with one accord, Mask, XVIII. I. all vied In evil, slave and despot ; Laon, II. iv. 5. thou hast lent To me to all, the power to advance iv. xvi. 4. And lifted up to God, the father of a//, . . . . C"^««, I. iii. 118. (4) everything around, the whole world. calm was spread On all below ; Laon, I. iv. 7. And all was interfused beneath Jane, Recoil. 73. (5) everything besides. As they of soul and a//y Ch. \st,\. \ii. He placed the fat and flesh and bones and all. Horn. Merc. xxir. 8. (b) everything one possesses. Has thrown herself, her cause, her life, her all, . CEdipus, li. i. 162. AH, adj. (1) Of number, the whole and each of them. And a// the Dreams that watched Urania's eyes, xxii. 5. collects the strength of all its fountains, .... Laon, 1. vii. 3. ./i// those whose fame or infamy must grow . . Triumph, 125. (2) Of time, the entire space, time or duration. And all the while the loud and gusty storm . . Jtilian, 295. Where all the long and lone daylight, , ... To Night, I. 4. ..4// day the wizard lady sate aloof, Witch, %XV\. \. ALL— ALOFT. 13 lay in trance All night within the fountain — . . Witch, xxviil. 2. Watering it all the summer with sweet dew, . . XXXII. 7. (3) every kind of. Have put aside a// worldly preference, .... C%. ij/, III. 63. which medicines all pain Julian, 499. (4) every one ot a number. [Days] All beautiful and bright as thou, . . . Jane, Recoil. 2. Maae all its many names omnipotent ; . . . . L/ion, II. viii. 5. Canst thou speak, sister ? all my words are drowned Prom. I. 758. (5) the whole of a class. When all the fools are whipped, Ch. \st, II. 55. and all the protestant writers, II. 55. If all turncoats were whipped out of palaces, . . II. 57. All, adv. (1) quite, entirely, utterly. these graves are all too young as yet Adonais, LI. i. Shall this fair woman a^ alone, Z-aow, I. xxii. 3. That was a// right, my friend: Faust, 11. yji\.. All overgrown with azure moss and flowers . OdeW. Wind, III. 7. all resigned To pleasurable impulses, Q. Mab, II. 60. lanthe's Soul ; it stood All beautiful in naked purity, I. 132. laughed upon the land All cloudlessly and cold ; — Zucca, I. 3. (2) everywhere. Above and a// around Nature's unchanging har- mony Q. Mab, II. 256. (3) for all the world, advl. phr. exactly. for all the world like my Lord Essex's there. . . Ch. 1st, 11. 49. All in all, adj. phr. supreme. Then we were all in all, Faust, II. 282. *All-'beholding', c. adj. from which nothing is hidden. The all-beholding sun yet shines ; Cenci, II. i. 174. All-beholding sun. Strike in thine envy .... IV. i. 134. But in the light of a//--i>2'^ grave. . Zxitiw, VII. xxviii. 9. ♦All-'dissolvingf, c. adj. utterly consuming or absorbing. Which wrapt me in its all-dissolving ^ow&r, . . Protn. II. i. 76. *All-embracing', c. adj. omitting no one. And wind me in thine all-embracing arms ! . . Cenci, V. iv. 116. *All-enduring', c. adj. unbreakable. without whose all-enduring will Protn. I. 1 14. *All-enslaving', c. adj. utterly debasing. The signet of its all-enslaving power Q. Mab, V. 54. *All-feeding', c. adj. which provides nourishment for all men. The pavement of this moist all-Jeeding earth ; . Ch. 1st, IV. 40. *All-infiuencing', c. adj. having power to direct or mould. Have drawn all-in^uencingviitue, Q. Mab, vi. 188. ♦All-knowing, c. adj. omniscient. And confidant of the all-knowing one VII. 104. *All-miscreative, c. adj. teeming with evil creations. From the all-miscreative brain of Jove ; . . . . Protn. I. 448. *A11 pervading', c. adj. pervading all things and persons. Immortal, all pervading, manifold, Laon, I. xxv. 7. *All-piercing', c. adj. interpenetrating. the keen sun's .^//-/z£^««jf bow, Prom. III. i'u. iig. *All-polluting', c. adj. corrupting or defiling everything. the work Of a//-/(7//M/z«^ luxury and wealth, . . ^. il/a*, viII. 180. *All-prevailing', c. adj. powerful over all in every way. all-prevailing foe ! I curse thee ! Protn. I. 285. And all-pre. wisdom, when it reaps The harvest . Q. Mab, ll. 93. *All-prolific, c. adj. ever producing. From all-prolijic Evil, Protn. I. 213. *All-prophetic, c. adj. filled with knowledge of the future. Poured itself forth in a//-/r(?/;^«/'zc song ; . . . II. i v. 76. *All-speaking', c. adj. lull of meaning. An awful grace to his all-speaking brow. . . . Q. Mab, vil. 82. *All-snbdning', c. adj. able to subjugate entirely. extends Its a;//-j//^(/«/«|r energies, Dcetnon, II. 175. Has gifted man with a^-j«d(/«/«p- will Q. Mab, W . i},^,. o'er the earth extend Their all-subduing energies, vili! 233. "'AU-STifficingr, c. adj. endowed with plenary powers. all-s. nature can chastise Those who transgress , HI. 82. Spirit of Nature ! all-stifficing Power, .... VI. 197. *All-surrounding', c. adj. encompassing entirely. Amid the all-surrounding air, Rosal. 5^7. As from the all-surrounding air 729. *AU-sustaining, c. adj. that maintains life in all. Hung in its cloud oi all-sustaining air : . . . . Ode Lib. II. 5 Twin nurslings of the all-sustaining air .... Protn. 1. 754. Like the wide heaven, the all-sustaining air, . . 11. v. 42. *All-trianipliant, c. adj. Ye all-triutnphant harmonies arise, III. i. 28. * Allah-ilia- Allah, ititerj. the Moslem war cry. When the fierce shout of Allah-illa-Allah / Rose Hellas, 290. ha ! hear I not 'Ki/ Tovxti i tier). Allah, Illah, Allah ! 829. *Allan, n. the largest peat bog in Ireland. In Allati's rushy bog ? CEdipus, I. 25. :|;Allegre, v. ir. plead, adduce, or declare. And that you may not say that la.... learning : Calderon, I. 136. if e'er You should allege a story so absurd, . . Hom. Merc. XLVI. 3. IjrAllegfed, pp. declared, set forth. the strange and execrable deeds Alleged in it— . Cenci, II. ii. 64. So stern, as to have planned the crime alleged, . v. II. 95. ""Alleviation, n. relief, mitigation, bettering. Such the (z//ei'?'a/2'ici« of worst wrongs V. iv. ill. ♦Alleviations, «. pi. of Alleviation. Such, the alleviations of his state, Prom. II. iv. 98. Alliance, n. friendly union. To brief alliance, hollow truce. — CEdipus, II. ii. 102. Allies, n. confederates in war. Have been abandoned by their faithless allies . Ch. 1st, I. 84. The Arnaut, Servian, and Albanian allies . . . Hellas, 368. :!:Allig'ator, n. properly applied to the American crocodile, but probably used here as a generic term for a saurian. and over these The jagged alligator, Prom. IV. 309. Allisfators, tt. pi. ot Alligator. Or charioteering ghastly alligators, Witch, LVIII. 4. Allow, V. tr. {}.) grant, accord. the poor pittance which the laws allow Of liberty, Q. Mab, v. 182. (2) agree, admit. (It is, you will allow, an oath of might) . . . Hom. Merc. LXV. 2. (3) (^satir.) permit. Allow me to remind you, grass is green — . . . CEdipus, II. i. 78. .<4//om; me now to recommend this dish — . . . II. ii. 22. Allowed, V. tr. suffered. scarce fl/tef^af A bird to live, Q. Mab,^!!!. ji. Allure, V. tr. draw away, entice. A vision which aught sad from sadness might al. . Laon, IV. xxxii. 9. Allures, v. tr. entices. Allures them forth with its cold smiles, .... v. vii. 3. Almighty, n. (1) a title of the Supreme Deity. Even as the Almighty's ire arrested them, . . . Q. Mab, VII. 189. from the winepress of the Alttiighty' s wrath ; . . vil. 218. Almighty, adj. (1) a title of the Deity. Farewell ; and I will pray Almighty God . . . Cenci, I. i. 125. O, God Almighty, do thou look upon us, . . . 11. i. 4. Almighty God, how merciful thou art ! . . . . 11. i. 22. Civil enough is this same God Altnighty, . . . Faust, i. 112. Almighty God his hell on earth has spread ! . . Laon, x. xxii. g. to the high fane Of their Altnighty God, . . . x. xxvi. 7. O God Altnighty I thou alone hast power ! . . x. xxviii. i. ' Is it then thine, Altnighty Power,' she cries, . .M.N. Post. Fr. 29. Almighty Father ! ProL Hellas, 78. Altnighty, had I deigned to share the shame . . Protn. I. 18. And our almighty Tyrant with fierce dread . . I. 161. God: Almighty Gda 11. iv. ii. Is there a God ! — aye, an altnighty God, . . . Q. Mab, vii. 84. And vengeful as altnighty / vil. 85. O altnighty one, I tremble and obey ! vii. 159. (2) all-powerful. altnighty as thou wert. In dreams of Poets old Laon, v. Song, 2. 5. Altnighty Fear The Fiend-God, ...... v. 6. 12. Avengeful, pityless, &nA almighty &&nA, . . . Q. Mab, IV. 211. And broken altars of the altnighty fiend, . . . vi. 222. war With my almighty tyrant, vil. 199. striding, as Almighty Death His bloodless steed. St. Epips. 140. ♦Almond-tree, ti. {Atnygdalus cottimutiis ) Burst on yon lightning-blasted almond-tree, . . Prom. II. i. 135. Almost, adv. nearly, well-nigh. Without a groan, almost vixKhoMA. a fear, .... Dcetnon, 11. 179. Till the ship has a. drank Death from the . . . deep ; Eug. Hills. 14. Until the lamp of day was a. spent It had endured, Laon, I. xiv. 4. And though as thin as Fraud almost — .... Peter, III. iii. 4. the flames almost To a glow-worm's lamp have dwindled : Protn. I. 556. f Aloe, It. one of a genus of plants {^N. 0. Lilicuece, sect. Aloina). And where the huge and speckled aloe made, . . Marenghi, xiv. 5. Aloft, adv. (1) in another world, heaven. It saw a glorious Lady throned aloft j Dante Conv. 16. (2) in the heavens. until aloft The stars of night grew pallid, . . Laon, HI. xxxiii. 3. (3) very high in the air. far fl/(7/?. In the clear golden prime Epips. igi. Sir Urian is sitting aloft in the air ; . . . . . . Faust, II. 150. O'er many a mountain chain which rears Its hun- dred crests aloft, Laon, IV. xxxii. 5. rear Their peaks a/i?/?, xii. xli. 3. (4) overhead, up above. he spread his cloak aloft On the bare mast, . . Alastor, 312. She saw aloft in the morning air, Mar. Dr. IV. 2. 14 ALONE— ALTERED. Were borne aloft in bright emblazonry ; . . . . Front. I. 649. Around the cradles of the birds a/(e/? Woodman, 51. (5) over the head or body. and clasped my hands a/o/K in ecstasy Laon, i. xxxvi. g. Van to throw Aloft his armed hands, X. xxxi. 6. Aloft, her flowing hair . . . did quiver XI. iii. 9. And they all whisk their tails aloft, CEdipus, I. 322. (6") through the air. To soar aloft with overshadowing wings ; . . . Laon, I. xxviii. 3. (7) Fig. bearing the lamp Aloft which thou hast kindled II. xliv. 3. ▲lone, n. the solitary one. The outcast, the abandoned, the alone ) . . . . Front. II. iv. 105. Alone, adj. (1) quite by oneself. He who would question him Must sail alone at sunset, Hellas, 166. I soon survived alone — Laon, VI. xviii. 7. She left me and I staid alone jLerict, 9. (2) (as compl. of vb. to be). One would not be alone Faust, II. 234. Say not that I alone am fond of prey Horn. Merc. LVI. 4. Now, since I am alone Calderon, I. 50. (3) no one else doing the same, exclusively. Whilst you alone stood up, and with strong words Cenci, II. i. 43. Is it mine To stand a. when kings and soldiers fear Laon, xil. xi. 8. That fairest child, who, . . . alone Stood up before the King, XII. vi. 5. Which Thou and I alone of living things .... Front. I. 3. (4) taken by itself. This is alofte Life, Joy, Empire, and Victory. . . IV. 578. (5) signifying difference, her fair hands Were bare alone Alastor, 166. (6) to let alone, = not to trouble about. Let Gold alone I only unlock the cask Cycl. 153. (7) left alone = deserted. I am \e(t alone/ — fulian, 397. He with this child had thus been left alone, . . . Laon, v. xxvii. 5. Alone, adv. only, exclusively, solely. To whom alone it has been given Fr. Moon, 2. to his God Alone he must deliver up his trust, . Ch. ist, 11. 143. thou a/(!7«^ hast power ! Laon, X. xxviii. i. Built in our hearts alone — IVat. Ant. V. 2. Alongr, prep. (1) passing through. To track along the lapses of the air Fr. Silence, 7. the winds drove The living spray a. the sunny air Julian, 22. and sometimes It floats along tt^e, spray .... Front. III. iv. 10. living things That fleet along the air, Horn. Venus, 5. (2) passing over. Were wandering in thick flocks a. the mountains Front. II. i. 146. clanged along '&& mountain's marble brow, . Fr. Athan. 11. iii. 28. And ships, wnose flight is swift along the wave. Horn. Castor, 8. (3) cast over, about. A light of laughing flowers a. the grass is spread. Adonais, XLIX. 9. (4) following the course of. Along the waves which sung and sparkled . . . Lcuyn. XII. xx. 3. We sailed along the winding watery ways . . . XII. xxxiii. 8. And his own thoughts, along that rugged way, . Adonais, xxxi. 8. (5) indicating direction rather than space traversed, A. a shelving bank of turf, which lay Under a copse. Question, I. 5. (6) throughout. Along these marble nerves ; Front, in. iii. 87. (7) upon. And along the loose hill-side, Faust, 11. 72. Along', adv. (1) onwards. We, beyond heaven, are driven along: .... From. iv. 161. By the whirlwind of gladness borne along; . . . iv. 85. on broomsticks we flutter along ; Faust, 11. 197. (2) with get = go away quickly. Get along, you horned thing Cycl. 57. Aloof, adv. (1) aside respectfully. All stood aloof, and at his partial moan Smiled Adonais, XXXIV. i. (2) apart from others. the Captain stood A. and whispering to the Pilot, Laon, viii. ii. 2. All day the wizard lady sate aloof Witch, xxvi. i. they stand aloof. And are withdrawn — . . . Tower of Fant. 15. (3) on high, up above aloof from the high towers And terraces, . . . Epips. 508. (4) from a distance. Maia's child Perceived that he came angry, far aloof Hont. Merc, xxxix, 3. (5) to a distance. Into the rough woods far aloof, Sensit. Fl. 11. 44. Aloud, adv. (1) in a loud voice, audibly. ' Vision and Love ! ' The Poet cried aloud, . . Alastor, 7,6^. and he sang aloud Cycl. 419. Then must the lonely helmsman cry aloud Ahasuerus ! Hellas, 173. At length they wept aloud, and cried ' the Sea ! . Hellas, 091. Drove fifty from the herd, lowing a&wrf. . . . . Hont. Merc. xii. 8. Strike the sweet chords, and sing aloud, . . . lxxxi. 4. 'A friend!' I cried 4orj, beaks of ships; Prom. IV. 28g. Ancient, adj. (1) very old in years and appearance. And nought but knarled roots of ancient pines . Alastor, 530. And ancient women and grey fathers wail . . . Cycl. 291. Tell, ancient hedger of Onchestus green, . Hom. Merc. XXXII. 2. Whom to wise Saturn ancient Rhea bare. . . . Hom. Venus,^. those antietit fanes, Now crumbling to oblivion ; Q. Mab, II. 166. The ancient steward, with hair all hoar, .... Rosal. 993. (2) having endured through generations. Towards our ancient house, and stainless fame ! . Cenci, V. ii. 147. The bridegroom Is of a very ancient family, . . CEdipus, I. 206. (3^1 of times long past. sweet debates Of aw«,?M/ lore, Pr. Athan. vi.\.H. soul-sustaining songs of ancient lore n~T - "' "' the ancient oracle is accomplished ; Cycl. 705. (^4) as it was originally. And all is in its antient state, Eug. Hills, 128. (5) former, and find Bacchus your ancient friend ; . . . . Q)cl. 433. And its aw«V«/ pilot. Pain • ■ . Eug. Hills, m. to know On second sight her antient playfellow, Julian, 154. Some likeness of his a««VK/ state was lent; . . Z.ao«, V. xxxyi. 4. I resumed my ancient powers at length ; . . . VII. xxvui. 3. (6) long established, enthroned. Mid antient rights and wrongs, . . . Rosal. 662. ♦Ancientness, n. antiquity. And chronicles of untold aticientness Q Mab, VII. 74- ANCLE -ANOTHER. 17 Ancle, see Ankle. And, co7tj. (1) as simple connecting particle. If dewy mom, a«(f odorous noon, and cv&n, . . Alastor, 5. Then up a steep and dark and narrow stair . . Laon^ ill. xiii. 7. (2) joining ideas (not subordinate) Were found these scandalous awi/ seditious letters Ch. 1st, III. 48. the billows having vainly striven Indignant and impetuous Witcky XLVI. 7. *Andes, a mountain system in S. America. the Andes, whose dark brow Frowned .... Dcemon, I. 131. the Andes, whose dark brow Lowered . . . . Q. Mab, I. 220. From the A. to Atlas, round mountain and isle, . Vis. Sea, 133. *Andrea, n. name of a servant. But not of my intent ! — Andrea! Cenci,\.\. \\$. Here, Andrea / Bear the bowl around I. iii. 90. Here, Andrea, Fill up this goblet with Greek wine. I. iii. 168. Andrea ! Go call my daughter, IV. i. 78. *Anear, adv. near, close by. ringing Aloft, afar, anear; Faust, II. 142. and swift it came anear. L,aon, I. vi. 9. ^Anemone, n. the wind-flower {^A. nemorosa). One: h&W zxiA ia.\T anemone : /V<7W?. II. ii. 13. By anemone and violet. Like mosaic, paven : . . The Isle, 2. ^Anemones, n. pi. of Anemone. Anemones grow paler for the loss Eleg. Bion, 9. Anew, adv. (1) afresh, again. Most musical of mourners, weep anew! .... Adonais, V. i. The world's great age begins anew, Hellas, 1060. And the same round anew began, Rosal. 719. (2) newly, in a fresh manner, freshly. Many a riddle there is tied anew Inextricably. . Faust, 11. 239. Of the green laurel, blown aw^zfy Prom^.li.xx. w. Angel, n. (1) supernatural being, genius. Lost .(4«^^/ of a ruined Paradise! Adonais, X. y. Even now the accusing An£'el waits to hear . . Cenci, IV. i. 35. lamentation heard in Heaven As o'er an a. fallen ; iv. i. 186. like God's angel ministered upon By fiends ; . . V. i. 43. like a balance in which the angel Ch. \st, II. 423. A golden-winged .^wp-^/ stood Fr. Satan, i. Before the Angel had told his tale, 10. Like its ill a«^£/ or its damned soul Hellas, ^20. Calm as an angel in the dragon's den — .... Laon, I. xliv. 5. like to an Angel, robed in white, VI. xix. 6. An ^«^«/ bright as day, x. x. 4. saw an .^?/^£/ tread The threshold X. xlvii. 5. All thought it was God's angel XII. ix. i. But soon, the guardian angel gone, Lerici, 27. And, whilst that sure slow A. which aye stands . Ld. Ch. ill. 1. The light-invested angel Poesy Marenghi, VII; 5. It bore me like an A. o'er the waves Of sunlight, Naples, 32. she will become transfigured Into an angel, . . CEdipus, I. 393. If innocent, she will turn into an a«^^/, .... 11. 1.86. to convert her sacred Majesty Into an angel, . . 11. i. 90. The Queen will be an a«^^/ time enough. . . . 11. i. 121. You cannot fail of being A heavenly angel. . , II. i. 185. as a sphered angel's child, Pr. AtJtan. II. iii. 2. And thine doth like an angel sit Prom. 11. v. 75. (2) messenger, or minister. made Our speedy act the a«^^/ of his wrath, . . Cenci,v.\\\. \\\. The hood-winked Angel of the blind and dead. Custom, . Laon, IV. xxiv. 3. (3) term of endearment. Soft, my dearest angel stay, M. N. Ravail, 82. (4) a person ot angelic qualities Spouse! Sister! Angel! Pilot of the Fate . . . Epips. 130. Augfel, adj. of supernatural purity or merit. the aw^£/ soul that was its earthly guest! . . . Adonais, xvii. g. *Angelic, adj. resembling ah angel. Like an angelic spirit pent Prol. Hellas, 208. Angels, n. (1) supernatural beings. Fairies, sprites, and aw£K/.s keep her I Bridal, 11. i. „ „ ,, ,, ,, Epitlial. 23. „ (2)9. Which only the angels hear, Cloud, 50. the Angels even Draw strength Faust, I. 4. The Angels draw strength from thy glance, . . • i. 25. Those angels of love's heaven, that over all . . Laon, V. xVi. 9. The Angels of thy sway, - — v. Song, 3. 3. They echo to the souna of angels feet M. N. Ravail, 70. Sweet as if angels sang, Nat. Ant. VI. 4. Each and all like ministering angels were . . . Sensit. PI. I. 94. did she Make her attendant angelshe^ II. 52. But if angels can weep, sure tnan may repine, . Tear, IV. 6. (2) messengers or ministers. Angels of rain and lightning : Ode W. Wind, 11. 4. Thine angels of revenge : Laon, x. xxix. 2. Anger, n. wrath, hot displeasure. If honest anger Have moved you, Cenci, V. i. 59. like the April anger of woman, Ch. 1st, 11. 403. Had lifted in its anger wandering by ; — ... Hellas, 408. by the contrition Of awp-«r turned to love . . . Za^«, v. xvii. 4. With the false aw^^r of the hypocrite? .... v. xxxiv. 6. Angers, v. refl. makes wrathful. it (zw^^rj me! Respited me from hell! . . . . Cenci,\.\. 2$. Angry, adj. A. Lit. (V) wrathful. Maia's child Perceived that he came angry. Ham.. Merc, xxxix. 3. There rose to Heaven a sound of angry song. . Orpheus, 72. Hard-featured men, or with proud, angry looks, . Prom. ill. iv. 41. (2) violent, disturbed. Which is, I know, a hell of angry dreams, . . . Cenci, iv. iv. 8. B. Fig. Or the dews fall, or the angry sun look down . . Hellas, 438. Angfnisli, n. (1) acute bodily pain. Frantic with dizzying ff«^«wA, Alastor, 2j,i. Scorn, heavier far than toil or anguish Laon, II. xliii. 5. The agonies of anguish and of death Medusa, I. 8. Remit the anguish of that lighted stare ; .... Prom. I. 597. where my spirit Was panted forth in anguish . IIL iii. 12.!;. These in a gulph of aw^MW;^ and of flame . . . Q. Mab, Vll. i^'&. (2) mental pain. The anguish of her mute and fearful tenderness, Laon, VI. xliii. 9. In silent anguish, on her husband's bier ! . . .M.N. Post. Fr. 28. Angnisli'd, ///. adj. (1) distressed with pain or grief. &xi anguish' dhexo ^\&s, . — — 7. With maddening joy mine a«^aM;^'2^. Whilst animal life many long years 1208. Like animalXxie., and tno' we can obscure not . Prom.. I. 484. Yet animal life was there, Q. Mab, I. 142! Animals, n. the brute creation. Of animals, and voices which are human, . . . Zucca, V. 3. ' ^Animate, v. tr. give life to. And thee, who art the form they animate, . . . Prom.. III. iii. 3. ^Animated, v. tr. gave life to it. Must quench the life that animated it Cenci, III. ii. 60. ^Animated, ///. adj. full of life, living. And, animated, strong, and many, Faust, II. 75. Like animated frenzies, Dcemon, I. "256. *Animated, //. quickened. With a spirit of growth had been animated! . . Sensit. PI. III. 65. ^Animates, v. tr. makes brilliant. Which the orient planet animates with light; . . Hellas, 217. ""Animation, n. quickening, enlivening. the anim.ation of delight Which wraps me, . . . Prom. IV. 322. *Ankle-deep, c. adj. Fig, up to the ankles. and ankle-deep in blood, Mask, xxxil. 2. :]:Ankles, n. the joints which connect the foot with the leg. our ancles Are sprained with standing here, . . Cycl. 642. the hair From the scalp to the ancles, .... Ginevra, 153. ^Anklets, n. ornaments round about the ankles. The many-coloured anklets and the chain . . . Cycl. 161. :|:Annals, n. chronicles, histories. And sung, old annals tell, as sweetly too, . . . CEdipus, I. 42. *AnniIiilation, n. (1) nothingness. Death .... Blushed to annihilation, Adonais, xxv. 3. Filling thy void annihilation, Prom. IV. 354. (2) utter destruction. one immortality. And one annihilation. .... Epips. 587. l( Annihilation — Dust let her glories be ! . . . Hellas, ic^. Huddled in grey annihilation, Prom. iv. 301. ^Announced, v. tr. told of the approach of. Servants aw«(?M«cgrf the gondola, Julian, 212. ^Announcing, pr. ppl. declaring. and came Announcing from the frozen hearth . Peter, v. xiii. 2. Annoy, v. tr. vex, trouble. a human breast Which thronging cares annoy— Hom. Merc. Vll. 5. Annoy, n. vexation, annoyance. wrought the latter much annoy, xcvii. 4. Annoyance, n. trouble, vexation. Shadow of annoyance Never came near thee: . . Skylark, 78. much, I wis To the annoyance of King Amasis. . Witch, Lxxv. 8. *Annul, V. tr. annihilate. annul The fairest of those wandering isles . . . Prol. Hellas, 17. reality to that Whose being I annul. Q. Mab, viil. 48. Anoint, v. rejl. smear with an unguent. A witch to be strong must anoint — Faust, II. 204. Anointed, //. we are 'nointed, stark naked are we ; ii. 182. Anon, adv. presently. anon All ceased, and there was silence . . . Laon, vii. xxxix. 4. Another, adj. (1) with n. expressed, one more, a further. Another Splendour on his mouth alit, .... Adonais, xii. i, and then another devil creeps behind the first . Ch. 1st, ll. 46. When one dance ends another is begun ; . . . Faust, II. 325. While he conceived another piece offun, Hom. Merc. Lxxxvil. 6. (2) with n. not expressed, some one else, another person. Another in her wilful grief would break Her bow Adonais, xi. 6. but when one meets Another at the shrine, . . Laon, iv. xiv. 5. May feel another's sorrow as their own .... Unf. Dr. 95. D i8 ANSWER— APACE. (3) a different. A. scene ere wise Etruria knew Its second ruin . Marenghi^ ill. i. but others came Soon, in another ^z."^: . . . Laon^ II. ii. 5. for gentle hearts another name Would speak . . Unf. Dr. 43. (4) a later or future. Another time. — My brain is swimming round ; . Cenci, I. iii. 164. I will declare a«(7Mer time; Witch, Uixvui. 5. (5) a second in effect, a counterpart. .(^w^M^r self, here and in Ireland: Ch. 1st, l\. 201. Another Orpheus sings again Hellas, 1074. (6) one another, as comp. recipr. pron. said of two or more. Councils and counsellors hang on one another, . Ch. ist, I. 128. And thus become the prey of one another, . . . II. 152. when next day the maiden and the boy Met otte a. Witch, LXXVI. 6. Answer, v. I. ir. (1) reply to. So mayst thou answer God with less dismay: . Cenci, V. ii. 118. for sobs she could not answer me Loon, v. xxvi. 9. Answer from their living graves This demand — . Mask, LII. 2. Once more a^jw^^ me : ProTn.\. \\\. and do thou answer me 11. iv. 134. (2) respond to, reciprocate. and rejoice When they did a«jw«r thee ; . . . Coleridge, \x. Voice, looks, or lips, may answer thy demands ? iS. To answer those kind looks— Laon, III. xxix. 4. The Earth's rent heart shall answer ye. ... Prom. I. 309. a music which Echo's lips . . yet can answer not, Unf. Dr. 9. (3) defend himself from. but the Count Must answer charges of the gravest import, Cenci, IV. iv. 12. (4) Fig. respond by signal. The fiery mountains answer each other ; . . . Liberty, I. i. II. intr. (1) make reply verbally. Dare no one look on me ? None answer? . . . ^— I. iii. 133. Answer not . . . farewell, III. i. 390. Thou hast a secret which will answer not. . . . iv. iv. 106. And bade to answer, not as he believes, . . . V. ii. 42. Answer to what I ask V. ii. 83. Why answer ye not, still ? Brethren ! .... Front. I. 130. answer me: As mine own soul would answer, . II. iv. 125. (2) respond. Answer from all their clouds and billows, . . . IV. 337. (3) echo. and the caverns round Will answer Ahasuerus ! . Hellas, 175. Answer, n. a reply, a response. such pangs compel My answer. Cenci, V. iii. 76. Make answer the while my heart shall break ! . Un/. Dr. 7. Answered, v. I. tr. (l) replied to. and so he answered me, — Poor fellow ! . . . . Julian, 198. (2) responded. With a mild look of courage answered mine, . . Laon, vi. x. 5. (3) Fig. Indignation Answered Pity from her cave ; . . Ode Lib. XI. 6. II. intr. (1) replied verbally. He answered not, but with a sudden hand . . Adonais, xxxiv. 7. the world's echo answered ' where ' ! Epips. 234. To whom thus Hermes slily answered: — . . Horn. Merc. XLIV. i. forgive My speech, a soldier answered — . . . Laon, x. ix. 8. I answered not, for the Eastern star grew pale, . Prom. II. i. 107. But a voice answered — ' Life ! ' Triumph, 180. (2) responded as an echo. vacantly to the stroke Of footfalls answered, . . Laon, v. xxii. 8. Answered, pp. (1) responded to. the lone Nightingale Has answered me .... X. ii. 3. A deep groan was answered from hell St. Ir. (3) XVIII. 5. (2) replied to. Thus I am answered: strange ! Prom. Ii. iv. 155. Answerest, v. tr. repliest to. pause ere thou a«.yw£re.y/ me ; Cenci,W.\\. WT- Answering, pr. pple. responding to. .<4wja/^r/«^ each other's ecstasy Rosal. 27,6. Answers, v. intr. replies. She answers not : Cenci, ill. i. 33. Answers, n. Fig. responses to touch. But sweetly as its a««c;er.y will Flatter hands . . Guitar Jane, ij. "'Antarctic, adj. of the southern hemisphere. Regions which groan beneath the Antarc. stars, Laon, V. Song, 6. 6. With the Antarctic constellations paven, . . . Witch, XLVIII. 3. ^Antelope, n. (1) a deerlike quadruped {Antilope cervicapra). And the wild antelope, that starts whene'er . . . Alastor, 103. Were panic-stricken by the antelope's eye, . . Cenci, I. ii. 90. Crushing the bones of some frail antelope . . . Dcemon, II. 87. An antelope, . . . Were less aetherially light : . . Epips. 75. Like arrows through a fainting antelope, . . . HeUas, 346. (2) Fig. With the milk-white Snowdonian Antelope . . . Gisb. 239. ^Antelopes, n. pi. of Antelope (1). from many a dale The A. who flocked for food . Laon, x. 11. 6. Then clouds from sunbeams, antelopes from leopards, Naples, 170. a tiger on Hydaspes' banks Outspeeds the antelopes Witch, LI. 4. ^Antenatal, adj. (1) happening before birth. Like echoes of an antenatal dream. — Epips. 456. memories of an flw/^wa/a/ life Pr. Athan. i. g\. (2) of a former state of existence. First, the antenatal Peter, Peter, Prol. 3. And many an a«/£wa/a/ tomb Sensit. PI. 11. 5^. *Antliill's, n. a hillock formed by ants. Seemed like an awM?7/'j citizens Q. Mab, 11. loi. Antient, see Ancient. *Anti-niask, n. set against another by way of counterfoil. 'Tis but The anti-mask, Ch. ist, 1. 174. Antioch, n. a town in Syria. Antioch now celebrates the consecration . . . Calderon, I. 7. I was Upon my way to Antioch i. (^. the high towers of Antioch i. 72. to the walls of .<4w//i5icAy I. 75. as I Have no acquaintances in Antioch, .... I. 80. the eyes and hope of .^w/«'(?ennine walks abroad with the storm. 12. the line Ofthe olive-sandalled Apennine ; . . . -Eujo: Hills, 306. On the wind-swept .<4/e«wz«£/ Guitar Jane, ^. And the Apennine" s shroud of summer snow, . . Serchio, 14. Divides from the far Apennines — 44. the steep Of a green Apennine : Trium-pn, 26. Petrella, in the Apulian Apennines Cenci, ill. i. 240. Apes, n. (1) Lit. sate chattering like restless apes Trium^ph, 493. (2) Fig. Called, from their dress and grin, the royal apes, CEdipus, I. 313. *ApIiorisius, n. maxims. whispered aphorisms From Machiavel and Bacon : Ch. ist, I. 54. *Aplirodite, n. the Greek Cjoddess of Love. Aphrodite With hair unbound Bion. Adon. i6. To the golden Aphrodite Will I lift, Cycl. 60. the deeds of golden .,4/;^ roi///^, Horn.. Venus, i. thy delight All seek O crowned Aphrodite, . . 8. *Aping', pr. pple. imitating. That he was aping fashion, Peter, II. xi. 3. and aping Europe's sons, Q. Mab, II. 185. aping all The wanton horrors of her bloody play ; v. 23." "'Apis, n. the bull of Memphis, which enjoyed the highest honours as a god among the Egyptians. How the god Apis really was a bull, Witch, LXXIII. 3. ^Apocalypse, n. the Revelation of St. John. Like Death in the Apocalypse. Mask, viii. 4. Apollo, n. the sun-god of the Greeks and Romans, and patron of music and poetry. When like Apollo, from his golden bow, . . . Adonais, xxvili. 6. Where .^/o/ifci spoke of old Eug. Hills, 114. Apollo, Pan, and Love, . . . Grew weak, .... Hellas, 232. the same evening did he steal away Apollo's herds; Horn. Merc. III. 4. But out to seek Apollo" s herds would creep . . . III. 8. Had met him since he killed Apollo" s kine, . . . xxiv. 5. Apollo soon will pass within this gate xxvil. i. Apollo past toward the sacred wood, xxxi. 3. Apollo hearing this, past quickly on — .... xxxvi. i. for his kine, Apollo Looked sharp ; XLI. 2. Apollo gently smiled and said : XLVIII. i. Apollo darted from his mighty mind L. 4. with lies and roguery To cheat Apollo. — . . . Liii. 6. While Hermes and Apollo reverent stood . . . LV. 2. Within the heart of great Apollo LXXII. i. and did move Apollo to unutterable love .... lxxiii. 8. that Apollo Whom the Olympian Muses ever follow : LXXVI. 7. The shell he profferred, and Apollo took. . . . lxxxiv. 8. And then Apollo with the plectrum LXXXV. 4. Thus King Apollo loved the child of May . . . xcvii. i. Whom Neptune and Apollo wooed the last, . . Hom. Venus, 20. Were silent with love, as you now, Apollo . . . Pan, II. ii. blue bells Of Hyacinth tell Apollo" s written grief. Prom. 11. i. 140. Apollo Is held in heaven by wonder ; II. v. 10. and Apollo bought And gave it to this daughter : Witch, xxxi. 5. ^Apollonian, adj. of the body of Apollo. I know that every Apollonian limb .... Hom. Merc. Lxiii. 2, Apologfy, n. justification, excuse. that apology Which kings who rule, Q. Mab, IV. 76. *Apostate, adj. renegade. There goes the apostate Strafford ; Ch. \st, I. 53. '''Apostates, n. renegades. With papists, atheists, tyrants, and apostates. . . i. 74. Apostle, n. one of the twelve first followers of Christ. pray That the Apostle Peter and the saints . . . Cenci, I. i. 29. Apostles, n. a name applied to leaders in a cause. the exulting cries Of thine a/o.Si'/^j, Q. Mab,V\. \7,6. *Apostolic, adj. derived by succession from the twelve apostles of Christ. and deny The apostolic power Ch. 1st, II. 225. *Apotlieosis, n. deification. Dews of Apotheosis from this bag (Edipus, II. i. 1 10. Appal, V. Ir. strike with terror. What were Defeat when Victory must appal) . Hellas, 359. As you would 'scape what might a//a/ a bolder— Hont.Merc.JM.6. It might the stoutest heart appal Mar. Dr. xvil. 4. that rolled But to a//a:/ the guilty Q. Mab, in. idx. *Appallingr, ppl. adj. terrific. W^ithin the sphere of that appalling fray ! . . . Laon, I. xi. 2. Apparent, adj. obvious, palpable. A manifest and most apparent thief, .... Horn. Merc. LVI. 7. Apparition, n. supernatural appearance. That apparition, sole of men, he saw Prom. I. 194. Apparitions, n. forms or figures. And lovely apparitions, dim at first, in. iii. 49. Appeal, n. (1) power to turn to for aid. No refuge ! no appeal I m. j. 70. (2) power to refer to. If there be no appeal to that Cenci, III. i. 186. Appeal, V. intr. (1) call upon, refer to. Appeal to Heaven against thee ; Calderon, in. 144. But I appeal to the Satumian's throne. . . . Horn. Merc. LII. 8. Oh ! I appeal to that blest day M.N. Melody. 18. (2) turn to. appeal To the eternal years enthroned before us. Ode Lib. XIII. 12. Appear, v. intr. (1) seem (to the eye). appear to whirl about Confusedly Cycl. «;86. Making the wintry world appear Like one . . . Jane^ Invitn, 19. Suddenly stained with shadow did appear ; . . Laon, I. vi. 6. would a. turbid and impure Compared with this, Matilda, 29. m one mighty torrent did appear, Triumph, 153. (2) seem (to the mind). They still a//^ar unanimous ; Calderon, I. lyi. Unworthy as it may appear;— n. 14. and make this Hell a. A heaven of sacred silence, Julian, 260. Nor can I live if thou appear Aught but thyself, . M. W. G. VI. 2. (3) become visible. Strange things within their belted orbs appear. . Dcemon, I. 251;. they suddenly appear. On yellow wings rushing . Hom. Castor, 16. A shape of speechless beauty did appear: . . . Laon, I. xlii. 2. in the deep The shape of an old man did then a. . in. xxvii. 7. that she To-morrow would appear, v. xix. 7. makes appear Strange clouds in the east ; . . . V. xl. 5. Three shapes around her ivory throne appear; . v. xlix. K. did there a//^flr The Temple of the Spirit; . . xii. xli.5. And make appear the melancholy ruins .... Prom. IV. 288. (4) make oneself visible. And dares, as he is, to a//^ar.^ Devil, xxill. 6. But in this case he did appear Peter, II. iv. i. Phantasm of Jupiter, anse, a//^fl^/ Prom. 1.221. This cave is thine. Arise ! Appear! in. iii. 148. (5) make its presence felt. That thought is fled, and one doth now appear . Dante Conv. 19. (6) are seen. Alas ! I fear thou hast, for none appear. .... M.N.Post.Fr. 67. And on the pedestal these words appear : . . . Osym. 9. (7) come forth. and the clouds appear From its chaos .... Prom. iv. 170. (8) be known to be. when thou must appear to be That which thou art I. 298. to appear What now they seem and are— . . .St. Epips. 112. Appearance, n. indication, sjonptom. She faints : an ill appearance this Cenci, IV. iv. 176. Appeared, v. intr. (1) looked like, earth Appeared a vast and shadowy sphere, . . Dcemon, I. 151. 'I , II n II 11 ,, . . Q. Mab, 1. 241. Earth s distant orb appeared Th^ smallest light . Dcemon, I. 160. 11 II ,, „ ,, „ . Q.Mab,\.2SO. and soon a//ear^a? Such tiny twinklers . . . . Dcemon, \\. ■i,i\. II II I, ,, ,, .... Q. Mab, IX. 222. (2) seemed. And some appeared the work of human hearts, . Prom. I. 589. Which once appeared to brave All Q. Mab, 11. 191. (3) became visible. towards the North appeared Thro' mist, . . . Julian, 68. In her half-eaten eyeballs two pale flames appear' d, St. Ir. (3) xvi. 3. in the midst of which a//£d!r^(:f A spirit .... Unjin. Dr. lyj. (4) became evident. the event Of that portentous fight appeared 2X length : Laon, I. xiv. 3. (5) were published in print. Appeared such mad tirades. — Peter, VI. iii. 2. Appears, v. intr. (1) seems to be. She shall become, . . . All she appears to others; Cenci, IV. i. 88. They are, what that which they regard appears, Hellas, 798. Their stern oppressor pleas'd ff/Z^a^j awhile, . M. N.Post. Fr.^i. D 2 20 APPEASE— ARBITER. (2) shows himself. The Jew appears Hellas, 184. I' the midst appears Laon, Laon, xil. 11. 8. (3) comes into view. Mont BXaxic appears— si\\\ snowy, and serene— . Mont B. 61. (4) becomes evident to the senses. Yet thro' their silver shade appears^ Prom. I. 224. (5) is remembered. Her memory, aye, like a green home appears^ . Laon, VII. xix. 5, Appease, v. tr. to satisfy or assuage. brought their atheist kindred to a//«fl.y^ God's wrath, X. xlv. 8. Appeased, pp. (1) dispelled, satisfied. My doubts are well appeased; Cenci, III. i. 362. (2) propitiated, allayed. the withering ire Of God may be appeased. . . Laon, x. xxxix. 4. Appetite, ti. (1) brutal desire. Whose horror might make sharp an appetite . . Cenci, I. i. loi. (2) wish to possess something. That you or yours, having an appetite, . . Horn. Merc. XLVIII. 7. (3) desire for eating. The appetite which you were used to have. . . . (Edipus, 11. ii. 21. I may recover my lost appetite, — II- i'- 30- he drags His palled unwilling appetite Q. Mab, III. 46. Appetites, n. sensual desires. a slave Even to the basest appetites — .... III. 33. Applause, n. approbation. Grinning applause, he just shewed them his claws. Devil, VI. 3. Assails that nature, whose applause he sells . . Q. Mab, v. 210. *Apple tree, n. a tree that bears apples. In which I saw an apple tree, Faust, II. 328. Apples, n. fruit of the apple tree {pyrus malus). Where two fair apples with their gleam .... II. 329. She with apples you desired II. 331. Have given the ape-guards apples, nuts, and gin, CEdipus, I. 321. Applied, //. administered as a remedy. As opiates, were the same applied. Peter, VII. xv. 5. Apply, V. tr. administer by torture. to apply the question to those prisoners, .... Cenci, V. ii. 185. Appointed, pp. (1) ordained, ministers Appointed to conduct him to the light . Alastor, 331. Than that appointed for their torturer ? . . . . Cenci, III. i. 193. But like a fiend a^/OTw/erf to chastise IV. i. 161. And that men say, God has appointed Death . . Laon, VIII. vi. 8. (2) arranged, agreed upon. the spot Appointedlov the deed Cenci, III. ii. 34. Appointed, ppl. adj. ordained, destined, arranged. Like stars to their appointed height they climb . Adonais, XLIV. 3. To its fit cloud, and its appointed ca.\% ; . . . . Epips. 351. far from the appointed place Faust, II. 3. Which sweeps all things to their appointed doom, Hellas, 450. Be they th' appointed stewards, Qidipus, II. ii. 97. Impels the generations To their appointed place, Prol. Hellas, 27. and at the appointed time Sends his decrees . . 29. hath its appointed sleep April, 181A, 20. Wait yet awhile for the appointed day — . . . Laon, II. xlv. i. Disdam not thou, at thine appointed term, . . . Ode Lib. XV. 14. *Apportioned, ppl. adj. allotted. Each his a//(?r^/(?M^rf realm? Prol. Hellas, 133. ^Apportioning, pr- pple. deciding. Apportioning with irresistible law Q. Mab, VI. 163. *Appreciate, v. tr. know the value of. that peace Which men alone a//r««a/^ ? . . . 111.213. Appreliend, v. tr. understand. I speak of things which ye can apprehend. . . . Laon, XI. xxi. 9. Apprehended, v. tr. understood the meaning. I apprehended not What thou hast taught me, . Hellas, 755. Apprehends, v. tr. is sensible of. Her spirit apprehends the sense of pain, . . . Cenci, III. i. 34. Apprehension, n. (1) moral grasp. An apprehension clear, intense, ...... Peter, IV. x. 2. (2) conscious perception. And felt in apprehension uncontrolled . . . . Q. Mab, I. 193. * Apprentice, v. tr. bind in covenanted service. Why did my father not apprentice me .... Cenci, II. ii. 6. *Apprised, v. tr. informed. .^//rw^i^ him ever of the joyless length . . . Q. Mab,V\n. \z%. ^Apprised, //. made sensible of. By which thy inner nature was apprised . . . VII. 50. Approach, v. I. tr. draw near to. I never run to approach things of this sort, . . . Calderon, I. 229. Her spirit shall approach the throne of God . . Cenci, IV. i. 93. these we did approach alway. ..;.... Laon, I. xlvii. 9. II. intr. come nearer. That step we hear approach must never pass . . Cenci, III. i. 272. the screams of woe I heard approach, .... Laon, VI. iv. 5. Approach! I come Thence whither thou must go! Hellas, 861. the Spirits of the human mind .... approach. . Prom. IV. 82. Approach, n. act of coming nearer. It tells the a//^(7aeA of a mystic form, . . . M.N. Spec. Hors.2'j. as when beauty awes All hearts with its approach, Ginevra, 137. Approached, v. I. tr. came near. As they approached their goal, Dcem.on, I. 148. „ , „ ,, Q. Mab, I. 238. Approached the overhanging battlement. . . . Dcemon, i. 240. , „ „ ,, ,, ... Q- Mab, II. 69. it relaxed its course As it approached me, . . . Laon, VI. xx. 3. All who approached their sphere VII. vii. 5. II. intr. came near. It rose as he approached, . Alastor, 277. As we approached a. shout of joyance sprung . . Laon, v. xy. 5. As I approached, the morning's golden mist, . . V. xliii. 4. A boat approached, xii. xx. 2. The charmed boat approached, xii. xli. 9. Yet none approached; Hellas, 382. Then Hope approached, Love, Hope, 37. Approached,//. (1) to come near, few strangers have (z/'/r(7a£',4^