V Ex Libris C. K. OGDEN FLOWERS OF FANCY Exhibited in a ^ tim of L03TDQN, Longman, Kees, Qrme.Brcrtvn Sc Gieej: 1829. DEDICATION TO MRS. FRANCES SCHULTES. IF the dedication of a work be considered as a tribute of respect due only to virtue and merit, I shall be jus- tified in addressing this to you, and thus giving my testimony to those excellencies which have, hitherto adorned your character. Endowed with a compre- hensive and perspicacious mind, enabling you to dis- tinguish rectitude from error, you have fulfilled the relative duties of consort, parent, and friend, in a manner deserving of the warmest panegyric, whilst you have preserved your amiable disposition untinc- tured by those caprices which so often characterize a. 2 . iv DEDICATION. and degrade the female sex. But above all, you have endeavoured to cultivate that wisdom which discovers the true lustre of intellect, by an exemplary piety, and a resignation to the divine will. The experience of many years has fully satisfied me, that the same un- erring principles will continue to govern your actions ; and I encourage the hope that they may be transmit- ted, by means of your instruction and example, to our only child, convinced as I am, that virtue is the best indication of mental excellence, and the surest founda- tion of happiness. S. INTRODUCTION. THE faculty of expressing our sentiments in per- spicuous and elegant diction, is so pre-eminent an accomplishment, that every candidate for literary celebrity exerts his utmost endeavours to acquire it ; and although topics may be clearly illustrated, and the charms of eloquence displayed, in simple lan- guage without the aid of rhetorical ornaments, yet it must be admitted that well-chosen comparisons, similes, or descriptions, are highly conducive to the embellishment of expressions, and add grace and dignity to composition. If it were possible to establish a criterion in lite- rature whereby philological taste might be regu- lated, it would be easy to prescribe rules for de- ciding at once on literary merit, and awarding its just degree of praise : but whilst a diversity of opi- VI INTRODUCTION. nion continues to prevail amongst mankind, the renown of a writer must necessarily depend more upon fortuitous events and the ruling fashion of the age, than upon the brilliance of his wit, or the force of his genius, as the example of Milton and others may serve to prove. The truth of this remark is so universally acknowledged, that every aspirant for public approbation now endeavours to discover some new path which may lead him to distinction, and hopes, through the medium of novelty, originality, or eccentricity, to gain popular fame. Some authors seek reputation by adopting a conciseness of style; others court regard by an elaborate amplification of their topics ; and a few expect to attract notice by a partial revival of obsolete phraseology. Popula- rity, however, seems, conformably with the existing rules of philology, to be most deservedly due to him who, following the light of truth, is enabled to convey his ideas with clearness into the minds of others, and who can occasionally illustrate his pro- positions by apposite comparisons, formed by allu- sion to natural and familiar objects of the senses. With a view to assist a writer of this description, the present volume has been compiled. INTRODUCTION. Vll In the alphabetical arrangement of the passages, (which have been collected verbatim from the re- spective authors cited) are shown the coincidences of expression which various writers have uncon- sciously fallen into, or designedly adopted. The classification of the similes under their respective heads, has been regulated according to their sub- jects and form. Those of a simple form will be found first represented, and others more diffusely illustrated follow them in succession. And as it has been considered unnecessary to incumber any of the expressions with a long enumeration of all the authors who have used them, the names of two only are introduced, the first of which may ge- nerally be regarded as the elder authority. It has also been thought unnecessary (except in few in- stances, where the length of the quotation rendered it unavoidable) to distinguish the poetical from prosaic extracts, by any peculiar mark or distinct metrical collocation of the words in lines. In the compilation will be found many proverbial similes or axioms, and some idiomatical expressions of a quaint nature, which have been introduced solely for the purpose of showing the names of the authors who have sanctioned them ; but no similes Viii INTRODUCTION. have been admitted that can create disgust, or of- fend delicacy. At the end of the alphabetical collection is an- nexed a great variety of descriptive passages, which it is presumed will, in conjunction with the antece- dent compilation, show that the talent displayed by our own writers in the art of imagery, or describing the operations and appearances of nature, has been by no means inferior to the skill of their continental cotemporaries, at any period of time since the re- vival of letters. Poetical composition without imagery attracts but little admiration, and although a pleasing descrip- tion of natural scenes may be easily composed, it oftentimes becomes extremely difficult to invent a simile in every respect adapted to illustrate and ag- grandize a subject. And perhaps nothing can be more mortifying to a writer, after he has published (as his own creation) that which he considers to be a happy comparison, to discover that the same in- cidents, expressed partially, or wholly in the same language, had been already given to the world by various predecessors. INTRODUCTION. IX It cannot be denied that the same train of ideas occurring to different writers, may superinduce the same forms of expression ; coincidences may there- fore take place accidentally, and an author may un- deservedly lie under the imputation of plagiarism. Where coincidences happen in the productions of two writers, the latter necessarily loses the merit of invention, and is considered as a mere imitator. Hence a test whereby an author may discover whether the offspring of his rnind be a new cre- ation, or an adoption, is desirable. Some authors have affected to distinguish com- parisons, similes, and similitudes, from each other; and a translator of Moliere has made the following remark, "We studious folks like a comparison better " than a similitude." It is scarcely necessary to endeavour to establish a distinction where little or no difference can be perceived, or to show that the terms " likeness" and " resemblance" are not synonymous ; yet for the satisfaction of the reader the following passages have been selected as ex- amples of the form of expression which may have been considered as comprising a similitude. " As righteousness tendeth to life, so he that X INTRODUCTION. " pursueth evil, pursueth it to his own death." Proverbs. " Far better is it to form affinity and strictest " friendship with a poor man of worth, than him " who joins iniquity with wealth." Euripides. " The likeness of those who take other patrons " besides God, is as the likeness of the spider, " which maketh herself a house, but the weakest of " all" houses surely is the house of the spider. These " similitudes do we propose unto men, but none un- " derstand them except the wise." Koran. " Similitudes or likenesses are the images or pic- " tures of the things to which they are compared, " lively explaining one thing in a far different ob- " ject : e.g. As a vessel is known by the sound whe- " ther it be whole or broken, so are men proved " by their speech whether they be wise or foolish." Wit's Commonwealth. To constitute a genuine simile it is requisite that the quality or attribute of a precedent subject, should be susceptible of comparison with the qua- lity or attribute of the subject which immediately INTRODUCTION. XI follows it, according to the current idiom of speech, and agreeably to the rules of logic. Thus the ex- pression, "White as snow," has reference to a previous subject (raiment for instance); white or whiteness is the attribute, and the ellipsis in the sentence being supplied, the simile will run thus : " Raiment, white as the whiteness of snow ;" or it may be thus rendered, " White as snow is white." Now it being admitted that the external appear- ance of snow represents the highest degree of whiteness which the mind can conceive, the com- parison of the highest degree of whiteness which raiment can exhibit, with the quality of snow, is philosophically just, and the aptness of every simile may by this mode of examination be readily ascer- tained. It will thus appear evident, that the terms qua- lity and subject, which have been used to express the constituents of a simile, not being sufficiently explanatory, have caused some to consider that a simile implied the illustration of a quality by the subject itself, instead of its quality ; not perceiving the absurdity of comparing spirit with matter, nor understanding that a just simile can only be formed Xll INTRODUCTION. by a comparison of a certain quality proposed, with the attribute or quality of a subject or thing ex- pressed. Similes of the following description may some- times be found : viz. " Pure as sanctity," where the subject itself may be considered in an intellectual sense, so as to correspond with the antecedent qua- lity ; or a personification may be presumed, and the affinity ascertained by thus rendering the expres- sion, " It is pure as sanctity is pure ;" agreeably to the rule before prescribed for showing the analogy of the qualities compared. Hence a simile may perhaps be defined as a form of speech illustrating a proposition by the compa- rison of an attribute or quality asserted, with its proper correlative. For example, the expression, "The colour of this paper is white," is a proposition, and the truth of it may be illustrated by showing its resemblance to the colour of some other object ; we may therefore say " The colour of this paper is as white as snow," or " It is as white as ivory ;" thereby meaning a peculiar quality or attribute of those sub- jects, which quality or attribute is the proper cor- INTRODUCTION. relative to the quality in the proposition intended to be illustrated. The reader will now perceive how essentially ne- cessary it is that every subject of a simile should possess such attributes as will harmonize with the qualities proposed. Many authors in the exuberance of poetical en- thusiasm, have suffered their judgment to be blinded by their fancy, and exposed themselves to severe criticism, by disregarding the analogy which ought to subsist between the implied quality or attribute of the subject expressed, and the antecedent qua- lity of the thing proposed to be illustrated, in the composition of their similes : and they seem not to have considered tnat it is the propriety of the thing represented, and not its magnificence, which consti- tutes the beauty of a simile; seeing that every simile ought to operate on the mind as a clear and obvious demonstration of a thing proposed. The following examples have been selected from a great number, which may be found in the works of authors otherwise deservedly celebrated for their genius, and are offered as a proof of negligent com- position and bad taste. XIV INTRODUCTION. " His heart was light as a sun-beam." " His heart was light as sunshine on the deep." " Happy as a wave that dances on the sea." " As soft in manners, as the silky fur upon the bosom of a playing kitten." * " Sounds, which are soft as Leda's breast." " Music, sweet as the tears that the dews of night distil." " A joy as pure and stainless as the gem that the morning finds on the blossom of the rose." " Joys, bright as April flowers." " The feeling, pure as morning's dew." " An empire, which rose like an exhalation." In the foregoing instances it is obvious that the qualities compared have no just correspondence with each other, and they evince an erroneous judgment not unlike that of the blind man, who thought the colour of scarlet resembled the sound of a trumpet. A great latitude is allowable to authors in the INTRODUCTION. XV use of hyperboles, where expressions are not in- consistent with the current idiom. Thus we say, " Brighter than the sun," " Fairer than whitest snow." A simile is supposed to be the result of calm me- ditation, and it ought not to be introduced into composition unless for the sake of illustration or em- bellishment. An author, therefore, in forming a si- mile should be very circumspect in the choice of his images, and should carefully examine their propri- ety before he ventures to adopt them ; because on the philosophical correctness of his simile he stakes his own judgment. Wild and obscure phrases unauthorized by our idiom ought to be avoided, and juvenile writers should be cautioned against the adoption of such dulcet expressions as " The violet breath of love is purity; 1 or comparisons like the following : " Faint as the echoes of far delight " And dreamy and sad as the sighing flight " Of distant waterfalls." It cannot too often be inculcated, that without perspicuity, no proposition can possess energy. XVI INTRODUCTION. Dr. Johnson once attempted to establish the cur- rency of phrases of the above-mentioned descrip- tion, and he thought the following metaphorical passages irresistibly fascinating: "We may raise " in time an artificial fastidiousness, which shall fill " the imagination with phantoms of turpitude, show " us the naked skeleton of every delight, and pre- " sent us with the pains of pleasure, and the de- " formities of beauty." Johnson was his own arche- type, and no one has since imitated his " tumour of phrase" with any success. Milton has observed, that rhyme obliges poets to express their thoughts in improper terms, but the truth of this observation may be fairly questioned. No one at the present day would venture to write unintelligibly upon the strength of such an autho- rity, since our vernacular tongue is sufficiently co- pious to admit of every species of composition, with- out danger of obscurity ; except that which may arise from ignorance or error : and few writers will be found to excel Tillotson and Robertson in prose, or Akenside and Cowper in poetry, either with re- spect to purity of language, or gracefulness of style. Similes are either simple, or amplified. The ex- INTRODUCTIONS XV11 pression " White as snow" is an example of the former; and the expressions, "White as falling " snow" "White as the fanned snow bolted by the " northern blast twice over," are examples of the latter. In the first example the idea of a peculiar quality is raised in the mind. In the second, the idea of the quality is heightened by the descrip- tion of the specific effect or change produced upon a sensible object by the operations of nature : and it is in proportion to the degree of pleasure which such descriptions excite, by a judicious combina- tion of appropriate images, that similes possess their excellence. Care should be taken that similes be not over- loaded, for they often lose their intended effect by their redundancy. The following may be given as an instance of a redundant description : " Brighter " than the beams of the clear sun at morning, when " he flings his showers of light upon the peach, or " plays with the green leaves of June, and strives to " dart into some great forest's heart, and scare " the sylvan from voluptuous dreams." Some of our early writers have afforded us ex- b XVlll INTRODUCTION. cellent models for imitation in the art of descrip- tion ; the works of Spenser and Shakespear abound with them. These authors have gained themselves a lasting fame, whilst many of their cotemporaries have sunk into oblivion ; amongst whom was John ' O Tatham, the author of the following simile, a chaste and natural representation, which, very probably, furnished Milton with the means of composing his beautiful exordium to the Fifth Book of Pa- radise Lost. " Fair as the eastern morn, when " with her summer's robe she decks the plains, and " hangs on every bush a liquid pearl." Few si- miles of modern times possess this exquisite paint- ing, this true delineation of a scene so often visi- ble in a rural morning's walk. An author who happens to adopt any remarkable expressions used by his predecessors, will gain no credit by pleading unconscious plagiarism. A re- spectful acknowledgment is due to the past produc- tions of genius, whenever their aid is required in composition : and although Milton might have been induced to borrow without avowal from Euripides, because Virgil had taken the same liberty with Homer, yet this license of adoption has been long INTRODUCTION. XIX denied to composers; and the practice was discoun- tenanced by one of our earliest poets, John Lidgate, the monk of Bury, who, alluding to Chaucer, says, " Wherefore it were but vain, Thing said by him, to write it new again." It has been already observed, that amongst our writers, Spenser and Shakespear claim the first rank in literary estimation, for the beauty and propriety of their similes and descriptions, and they are espe- cially recommended to the notice of the student. But amongst all the writings which tend to reple- nish and illuminate the human mind with sublime ideas the Sacred Volume, " velut inter ignes Luna " minores," stands transcendent, and will be found, upon a dispassionate investigation, best adapted to ennoble our conceptions, as the works of some of our best writers who have resorted to that source will sufficiently demonstrate. Numerous passages might be adduced in support of this opinion ; to which might also be added the concurrent testimony of the wisest and most learned men of other nations, whose productions have enlarged the boundaries of science. The introduction of a few examples, however, may be allowable on the present occasion. b2 XX INTRODUCTION. Longinus, one of the most celebrated critics of antiquity, represented Moses as an extraordinary person, because he had conceived a just idea of the power of the Deity, and exemplified it in this re- markable expression: "God said, Let there be light; " and there was light." In this instance we have the testimony of a pagan in attestation of the sub- limity of a passage occurring in the first page of the sacred writings. This however, as will in the sequel be shown, was not the only passage which deserved the approbation of a writer on the sub- lime. Longinus has been greatly admired for comparing Homer in his decline of life, to the setting sun, whose grandeur still remains without the meridian heat of his beams : but this comparison, beautiful as it confessedly is, must yield to the description given of a righteous man, in Ecclesiasticus : " He " was as the morning star in the midst of a cloud, " and as the moon at the full as the sun shining " upon the temple of the Most High, and as a rain- " bow giving light in the bright clouds.'' What can possibly exceed the sublimity of sentiment demonstrated by this comparison of the glory of a INTRODUCTION. XXI man's righteousness with the glory of the sun shining upon the temple of its own Creator? Light, being the purest of all material things, has been considered as a fit medium to represent God himself: hence we find the expression, "God is " light, and in him is no darkness." The sun, as the fountain of light, has been the object of adora- tion among many nations. In the ancient Jewish times, the people of the East worshipped it under the names of Baal, Chemosh, and Moloch ; and the Sun of Righteousness is a beautiful metaphor, ap- plicable to Christ. The Saviour himself, in de- scribing the purity of the faithful at the end of the world, has recourse to the like figure ; for he says, " Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in " the kingdom of their Father." A similar passage is to be found in the Book of Daniel, "They that " be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firma- "ment; and they that turn many to righteousness, " as the stars for ever and ever." Saint Paul, finding no object in nature sufficiently majestic to place in comparison with the glory of Christ, says : " God hath set him at his own right XX11 INTRODUCTION. " hand in heavenly places, far above all princi- " pality and power, and might and dominion, and " every name that is named, not only in this " world, but in that which is to come." The same writer, in discoursing on the subject of eternal bless- edness, cites the following passage : " Eye hath not " seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the " heart of man, the things which God hath prepared " for them that love him." The circumstance of presuming the impossibility of discovering an adequate resemblance in nature, in this instance, leads the mind into an agreeable contemplation of the works of nature, for the pur- pose of endeavouring to find some similitude. The creation of light doubtless implies the om- nipotence of the Creator : but as to annihilate, de- monstrates as much the power of the Deity as to create, the following passage in the Book of Revelation may be adduced as capable of gene- rating in the mind the most exalted sentiments, by the awful magnificence of the images represented : " And I saw another mighty angel come down INTRODUCTION. XX111 " from heaven, clothed with a cloud: and a rainbow " was upon his head, and his face was as it were " the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire. And he set " his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on " the earth, and he cried with a loud voice : and " when he had cried, seven thunders uttered their " voices. And he lifted up his hand to heaven, and " sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who " created heaven, and the things that therein are, " and the earth, and the things that therein are, " and the sea, and the things which are therein, " that there should be time no longer" In contemplating the grandeur of the foregoing extract, and comparing it with the following quota- tions from the Koran (which may be considered as the best examples of its descriptive style), the supe- riority of the former will be perceptible. "Verily, I swear by the stars which are retrograde, " which move swiftly, and which hide themselves ; " and by the night when it cometh on, and by the " morning when it appeareth, that these are the " words of an honourable messenger By the sun " and his rising brightness, by the moon when she XXIV INTRODUCTION. " followeth him, by the day when it showeth his " splendour, by the night when it covereth him with " darkness, by the heaven and him who built it, by " the earth and him who spread it forth, by the " soul and him who completely formed it, and in- " spired into the same its faculty of distinguish- u ing, and power of choosing, wickedness and pi- " ety ; now is he who hath purified the same happy, " but he who hath corrupted the same is miserable." A very distinguishing beauty is discoverable in the common version of the sacred scriptures by the adoption of a few monosyllables at the conclusion of a sentence, to express the emphasis of a sub- ject. The declaration of Nathan to David " Thou " art the man," in the celebrated parable ; and the declaration of the prophet Elijah to the widow whose son he had restored to life, " See, thy son " lives," are fine instances of climax ; to which may be added another striking example in the cir- cumstantial description of the miracle performed by the prophet Elisha at Shunem, wherein the chief virtues and most active passions of the soul are ex- emplified in that simplicity of language which so eminently distinguishes the sacred historians. INTRODUCTION. XXV Amongst the Eastern nations, and especially amono- the Jewish tribes, an honourable distinction O * depended on the continuation of the family line of descent: the failure of issue was therefore regarded as a great calamity, whilst the birth of a child in- spired the family with the utmost joy, and was con- sidered as the most inestimable blessing. The prophet Elisha had been hospitably enter- tained as an inmate in the house of one of the chief inhabitants of Shunem who was childless ; and be- ing willing to express his gratitude for the benevo- lence which he had experienced, he in the spirit of inspiration predicted the birth of a child, and as- sured the Shunamite that she should soon embrace a son. The prophet's prediction was fulfilled : a male child was born, which grew up ; and it is rea- sonable to conclude that he was the object of his parents' fondest regard. It happened, however, that being with his father in the fields, he suddenly fell sick, having been struck (as some have imagined) by the ardent rays of the sun. On this distressing occasion, his father caused the child to be carried to his mother for assistance. The Shunamite doubtless exerted her utmost efforts to preserve the XXVI INTRODUCTION. life of her only child ; but human aid was unavail- ing ; he sat on her knees for a short time, and then died. Overwhelmed with affliction, the distracted parent hurried to the prophet, and sunk prostrate at his feet in an agony of speechless grief. The pro- phet's servant attempted to repulse her : but Elisha, perceiving that some great calamity had befallen his benefactress, said, " Let her alone ; her soul is vexed " within her, and the Lord hath hid it from me." At length recovering the power of utterance, she de- scribed her loss in these most impassioned and pa- thetic interrogations, " Did I desire a son of my " Lord? Did not I say do not deceive me?" The prophet's sympathy was awakened, and he imme- diately proceeded to the house where the child laid dead. He there prayed to the Lord : and the spirit of the child returned ; and having called the Shu- namite he said, "TAKE UP THY SON." A reflecting mind will perceive how consider- ably the effect of the preceding incidents is height- ened by the use of the four monosyllables which conclude the historical relation. And it seems to be impossible, according to the general idiom of our language, to substitute any other form of ex- INTRODUCTION. XXV11 pression, or adopt any species of circumlocution or periphrasis, which could be so well adapted to create feelings of shame, or emotions of joy, in the individuals mentioned in the respective narra- tives, as the words used in our present translation. Milton has with the happiest effect imitated this peculiar style of composition in the conclusion of his periods. He thus describes the first transgres- sion of Eve : " her rash hand in evil hour " Forth reaching to the fruit, she pluck'd, she eat ; " Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seat " Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe " That ALL WAS LOST." There is no passage to be found in the works of any ancient uninspired writer, that can affect the mind in so powerful a manner as this does ; and it is not now within the compass of literary skill or ingenuity, to describe the consequences of that fatal act of the mother of mankind with equal effect, in different phraseology, notwithstanding the boasted improvements in our language since the age in which Milton flourished. XXV111 INTRODUCTION. Another example of a beautiful climax produced in like manner at the close of a period may be se- lected from the same author in the following de- scription, where Adam resolves to live or perish with Eve. " O fairest of creation, last and best " Of all God's works, creature in whom excell'd " Whatever can to sight or thought be form'd " Holy, divine, good, amiable, or sweet ! " How art thou lost ! how on a sudden lost, " Defac'd, deflower'd, and now to death devote ! " Rather how hast thou yielded to transgress " The strict forbiddance, how to violate " The sacred fruit forbidden. Some cursed fraud " Of enemy hath beguil'd thee, yet unknown, " And me with thee hath ruin'd ; for with thee " Certain my resolution is to die : " How can I live without thee, how forgo " Thy sweet converse, and love so dearly join'd, " To live again in these wild woods forlorn ! " Should God create another Eve, and I " Another rib afford, yet loss of thee, " Would never from my heart ; no, no ! I feel " The link of nature draw me, flesh of flesh, " Bone of my bone thou art, and from thy state " Mine never shall be parted BLISS OR WOE." It is not improbable that Milton might have been assisted by the following sentiments of attachment expressed by Ruth to Naomi in the sacred writings. INTRODUCTION. XXIX " And Ruth said, Entreat me not to leave thee, " or to return from following after thee: for whither " thou goest, I will go ; and where thou lodgest, I " will lodge : thy people shall be my people, and " thy God, my God. Where thou diest, will I die; " and there will I be buried : the Lord do so to me, " and more also, if ought but death part thee and " me." In declaring the attributes of God, the creator of the universe, what could be more appropriate and sublime than the words of Moses " Give ear, O ye " heavens, and I will speak ; and hear, O earth, the " words of my mouth." Or those of Isaiah, " Hear, " O heavens, and give ear, O earth ; for the Lord " hath spoken." The Book of Psalms thus describes the omnipo- tence of the Deity : " By the word of the Lord were the heavens " made, and all the host of them by the breath of " his mouth. He gathereth the waters of the sea " as an heap, he layeth up the deep in storehouses. " Let all the earth fear the Lord. Let all the inha- XXX INTRODUCTION. " bitants of the world stand in awe of him ; for he " spake, and it was done; he commanded, and it " stood fast." Mr. Mason in his Caractacus, has agreeably to this model entertained a magnificent conception of the power of the Almighty in the following lines. " My soul confides " In that all-healing, and all-forming power, " Who on the radiant day when time was born, " Cast his broad eye upon the wild of ocean " And calm'd it with a glance : then plunging deep " His mighty arm, pluck'd from its dark domain " This throne of freedom, lifted it to light, " Girt it with silver cliffs, and call'd it Britain." The majesty of God is thus described by the prophet Habakkuk: " God came from Teman, and the Holy One from " Mount Paran. His glory covered the heavens, " and the earth was full of his praise. And his " brightness was as the light : He stood and mea- " sured the earth/ The mountains saw him, and " they trembled. The overflowing of the water " passed by : the deep uttered his voice, and lifted " up his hands on high." INTRODUCTION. XXXI Milton has beautifully amplified a part of this description in the following lines. In his hand " He took the golden compasses prepar'd " In God's eternal store to circumscribe " This universe, and all created things ; " One foot he centred, and the other turn'd " Round through the vast profundity obscure, " And said, Thus far extend, thus far thy bounds, " This be thy just circumference, O world ! The prophet Nahum thus describes the power of God: " The Lord is great in power He hath his way " in the whirlwind and in the storm, and the clouds " are the dust of his feet. He rebuketh the sea, " and maketh it dry, and drieth up all the rivers : " Bashan languishes, and Carmel, and the flower of " Lebanon languishes. The mountains quake at " him, and the hills melt, and the earth is burned " at his presence, yea, the world and all that dwell " therein. Who can stand before his indignation ? O " and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger ?" A general reader will easily perceive that to this description two of our most eminent writers, Shake- XXX11 INTRODUCTION. spear and Addison, have been indebted for some of their most celebrated lines. The power of the Deity is eminently illustrated in the following extract from Obadiah : " The pride of thine heart hath deceived thee, " thou that dwellest in the clefts of the rock, whose " habitation is high ; that saith in his heart, Who "shall bring me down to the ground ?. Though " thou exalt thyself as the eagle, and though thou " set thy nest among the stars, thence will I bring " thee down, saith the Lord." Dr. Johnson has thus imitated it in his Tragedy of Irene: " Should the fierce North upon his frozen wings " bear him above the wondering clouds, and seat " him in the Pleiad's golden chariot, thence shall " my fury drag him down to tortures." In the ancient mythological writers we occasion- ally find passages descriptive of the descent of Mer- cury and Iris from heaven on messages of the celestial INTRODUCTION. XXXlll deities ; but none of them can be placed in compe- tition with the description given in the Book of Psalms. " He bowed the heavens also, and came down, " and darkness was under his feet. And he rode " upon a cherub and did fly ; yea, he did fly upon " the wings of the wind." In descriptions of a deprecatory nature, few will be found in any uninspired writer more beautiful and impressive than the following supplication of the prophet Ezra. " I fell upon my knees, and spread out my hands " unto the Lord, and said, O my God, I am ashamed, " and blush to lift up my face to thee ; for our ini- " quities are increased over our head, and our tres- " pass is grown up unto the heavens." And what imagery in any production of the hu- man mind can be comparable to the following pas- sage in the Book of Revelation, where the Almighty is described as extending his mercy and compassion to the righteous who had suffered tribulation ? XXXIV INTRODUCTION. " And God shall wipe away all tears from their " eyes." It is observable that the sacred writers very fre- quently have recourse to a meiosis, or such a form of expression as implies more than is declared : hence the beautiful simplicity of this passage signifies the highest possible state of everlasting felicity. In declamation there is nothing which more pow- erfully operates on the hearers' minds than when the speaker illustrates his argument by way of anti- thesis; and the writer to the Hebrews has given us a matchless example. " Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foun- " dation of the earth, and the heavens are the works " of thine hands : they shall perish, but thou re- " mainest ; and they shall all wax old as doth a " garment, and as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, " and they shall be changed : -but thou art the same, " and thy years shall not fail." We meet with many passages in poetical writers which affect the passions in a very peculiar manner, INTRODUCTION. XXXV and often raise extraordinary emotions by a new and unexpected association of images; the excite- ment, however, soon subsides, because the incidents related are founded on fiction; but the descrip- tions in the sacred writings being established on the basis of truth, make deep and lasting impressions on the mind. Having thus attempted by means of a few illus- trations, to support the opinion herein-before ad- vanced, it may in conclusion be remarked, that the Sacred Scriptures abound with beautiful images, adapted to enrich composition ; and we are per- suaded that an attentive perusal of them will not only expand and improve the heart, but highly en- lighten the understanding of every reader who wishes to excel others either in eloquence, poetry, or painting. c 2 ACKNOWLEDGMENT. THE Compiler takes this opportunity of publicly acknowledging his obligations to various gentlemen throughout the kingdom, who have promoted his views by permitting him to examine their collections of scarce dramatic works ; and he should feel a con- sciousness of disrespect and ingratitude, if he did not in an especial manner allude to the kindness received from the noble proprietor of the Charle- mont Library in Dublin, who with a liberality of mind characteristical of his country, afforded the Compiler the utmost accommodation to enable him to accomplish the object of his researches. AUTHORS' NAMES, OR PRODUCTIONS REFERRED TO. J. Adams. Joseph Addison. Anna Letitia Aikin. Mark Akenside. Anacreon (translation). Appollonius Rhodius (transla- tion). Robert Armin. John Armstrong. William Ashburnham. Francis Atterbury. John Baillie. Joanna Baillie. William Balmford. Samuel Bamford. John Bancroft. John Banks. Anna Letitia Barbauld. Alexander Barclay. Richard Barford. Barnaby Barnes. Robert Baron. Lodow Barry. Bernard Barton. J. Beattie. Francis Beaumont. Joseph Beaumont. Beaumont & Fletcher. Charles Beckingham. William Bedloe. Aphra Behn. Drawbridgecourt Belchier. Fettiplace Bellers. Richard Bernard. Thomas Betterton. Alexander Bicknell. John Bidlakc. James Bird. Richard Blackmore. Martin Bladen. AUTHORS NAMES, OR Robert Blair. Hugh Blair. Robert Bloomfield. Barton Booth. Frances Boothby. John Bowring. Henry Boyd. Robert Boyle Earl of Orrery. Samuel Boyse. Henry Bradshaw. T. Brerewood. Anthony Brewer. Richard Brome. Alexander Brome. Henry Brooke. Mrs. F. Brooke. Charlotte Brookes. William Broome. Anthony Brown. William Browne. Dr. John Browne. Mary Anne Browne. Michael Bruce. Buckingham. Christopher Bullock. General J. Burgoyne. Edmund Burke. Henry Burkhead. Charles Burnaby. Charles Burney. Frances Burney. Robert Burns. Edward Burt Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy. Amyas Bushe. Charles Butler. Lord Byron. Thomas Campbell. James Campbell. Thomas Carew. Harry Carey. Lodowick Carlell James Carlile. Frederick Earl of Carlisle. Richard Carpenter. William Cartwright. J.Caulfeild. James Cawthorn. Mrs. Centlivre. George Chapman. Thomas Chatterton. W. Churchey. Charles Churchill. Geoffry Chaucer. Colley Cibber. Theophilus Cibber. Cicero (translation). John Clare. James Cobb. Aston Cockayne. Charles CofFey. William Collins. George Colman. Coluthus (translation). William Congreve. John Cook. PRODUCTIONS REFERRED TO. Thomas Cooke. John Gilbert Cooper. Mrs. Cooper. Matthew Coppinger. John Corye. Barry Cornwall. A. S. Cottle. Nathaniel Cotton. Charles Cotton. Abraham Cowley. Mrs. H. Cowley. William Cowper. Judith Cowper. David Craufurd. Richard Crashaw. George Croly. John Crown. Richard Cumberland. Samuel Daniel. Sir William Davenant. Charles Davenant. Robert Davenport. J. Davies. William Davies. John Day. Thomas Dekker. J. Delap. Sir John Denham. John Dennis. Thomas Dilke. John Dillon. William Dimond. George Read Dixon. R. Dodsley. Dodsley's Collection. Thomas Dogget. John Donne. Dorset. Gawen Douglas. George Gerbier Douvilly. Alexander Dow. Harriet Downing. Nathan Drake. The Drama. Michael Drayton. Robert Drury. John Dryden. Dryden's Miscellany Poems. Stephen Duck. Thomas Duffett. Richard Duke. Mr. Dunkin. Thomas Durfey. John Dyer. Edward Ecclestone. Lawrence Echard. R. Edwards. Charles A. Elton. England's Parnassus. Sir George Etherege. Edward Fairfax. W. Falconer. Harriet Falconer. Sir Francis Fane. Sir Richard Fanshaw. George Farquhar. AUTHORS NAMES, OR Francis Fawkes. Elijah Fenton . Nathaniel Field. Henry Fielding. Edward Filmer. G. Fletcher. Samuel Foote. John Ford. Thomas Forde. John Fountain. Charles Fox. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. Philip Francis. Abraham Fraunce. Thomas Franklin. Philip Frovvde. Samuel Garth. George Gascoigne. John Gay. Charles Gildon. Thomas Gisborne. Henry Glapthorne. R. Glover. Robert Glynn. Thomas Goff. Oliver Goldsmith. Robert Gomersal. Charles Goring. Robert Gould. John Gower. James Grainger. Bertie Greatheed. Matthew Green. George Smith Green. Robert Greene. S. Gunning. William Habington. Bp. Hall. William Hamilton. Hall Hartson. William Havard. Peter Hausted. Stephen Hawes. William Hawkins. William Hayley. Eliza Haywood. William Heard. Paul Heffernan. Mrs. Hemans. William Hemings. Robert Herrick. James Hervey. T. K. Hervey. Hesiod (translation). William Hett. Jasper Hey wood. Thomas Heywood. John Heywood. Henry Higden. Bevil Higgons. Aaron Hill. Benjamin Hoadly. Prince Hoare. William Hodson. James Hogg. Thomas Hogg. PRODUCTIONS REFERRED TO. Thomas Holcroft. Barton Holy day. John Home. Barbara Hoolc. Charles Hopkins. Sir Robert Howard. James Howard. Edward Howard. Gorges Edmond Howard. James Howell. Francis Hoyland. John Hughes. Thomas Hull. J. H. L. Hunt. Thomas Hurlstone. Robert Hurst. Sir Hildebrand Jacob. Richard Jago. Soame Jenyns. Robert Jephson. Samuel Johnson. Dr. Samuel Johnson. Charles Johnson. Sir William Jones. Henry Jones. John Jones. Ben Jonson. Thomas Jordan. William Joyner. Junius. George Keate. Hugh Kelly. Thomas Killigrew. Henry Killigrew. Henry King. John Kirk. Thomas Kyd. John Lacy. L. E. Landon. Walter S. Landor. John Langhorne. Lansdowne. John Leanerd. Mary Leapor. Nathaniel Lee. Miss Lee. Charlotte Lennox. M. G. Lewis. John Lidgate. John Lilly. George Lillo. Lisle Robert Lloyd. Thomas Lodge. John Logan. Edward Lovibond. Sir William Lower. Lusiad (translation). Lyttelton. Lewis Machin. Charles Macklin. Leonard Macnally. J. Macpherson. Madan. L. Maid well. Jasper Maine. AUTHORS NAMES, OR David Mallet. Mrs. de la Riviere Manley. F. Manning. Christopher Marlowe. Shakerly Marmion. John Marston. Benjamin Martyn. Andrew Marvel. William Mason. Philip Massenger. William Mavor. Thomas Maurice. Thomas May. Robert Mead. Henry Medwall. Mark Antony Meilan. Thomas Meriton. Moses Mendez. James Merrick. Robert Merry. William Julius Mickle. Thomas Middleton. H. H. Milman. James Miller. John Milton. Mirandola. Joseph Mitchell. Mary Russell Mitford. James Montgomery. Robert Montgomery. Sir Thomas Moore. Sir John Henry Moore. Edward Moore. Thomas Moore. Thomas Morton. Peter Motteux. John Mottley. William Mountford. Arthur Murphy. Thomas Nabbs. Henry Neele. Robert Nevile. Duke of Newcastle. Margaret Duchess of Newcastle. Mr. O'Brien. John Ogilvie. John O'Keeffe. John Oldmixon. Ossian's Poems. Thomas Otway. Oxford Sausage. William Painter. John Palsgrave. Thomas Parnell. Anthony Pasquin. William Paterson. Henry Peacham. George Peele. William Penkethman. Thomas Penrose. Ambrose Philips. Catherine Philips. J. Philips. William Philips. Thomas Picke. Matthew Pilkington. PRODUCTIONS REFERRED XO. Pindar (translation). Peter Pindar. Christopher Pitt. Mary Pix. Poetical Calendar by Fawkes & Woty. Robert Pollok. J. Pomfret. Poole's Parnassus. Alexander Pope. Samuel Pordage. Ab. Portal. Thomas Porter. Jane Porter. Dr. Porteus. George Powell. Edmund Prestwich. Matthew Prior. Henry James Pye. Francis Quarles. James Ralph. Alan Ramsay. Thomas Randolph. Edward Ravenscroft. Thomas Rawlins. Frederick Reynolds. Nathaniel Richards. William Richardson. David Lester Richardson. William Roberts. Mary Robinson. Thomas Shipman. James Shirley. John Benjamin Rogers. S. Rogers. Mr. Rolle. Matthew Rolleston. Richard Roll. William Rose. Nicholas Rowe. Mrs. Rowe. William Rowley. Samuel Rowley. Joseph Rutter. M. Sackville. Sacred Scriptures. William Sampson. George Sandys. Richard Savage. Charles Saunders. Sir Walter Scott. John Scott of Am well. Thomas Scot. Sir Charles Sedley. Amhurst Selden. Elkanah Settle. George Sewell. Thomas Shad well. William Shakespear. Lewis Sharp. Cuthbert Shaw. Richard Shiel. William Shenstone. S. Sheppard. Edward Sherburne. R. B. Sheridan. AUTHORS NAMES, OR Henry Shirley. William Shirley. Sir Philip Sidney. John Skelton. Edmund Smith. John Smith. Henry Smithers. Tobias Smollett. William Somervile. Robert South. Thomas Southern. Robert Southey. Edmund Spenser. Edward Stanley. Thomas Stanley. Earl of Sterline. James Sterling. John Hall Stevenson. M. Stevenson. William Strode. John Studley. C. C. Sturm. John Sturmy. Sir John Suckling. Henry Earl of Surrey. Jonathan Swift. Joshua Sylvester. Tasso (translation). Nahum Tate. John Tatham. William Taverner. John Taylor. James Templeton. Lewis Theobald. Theocritus (translation). William Thompson. Benjamin Thompson. James Thomson. George Thornley. Lord Thurlow. Thomas Tickell. John Tillotson. John Tobin. . ' Tomkis. George Townsend. John Tracy. Joseph Trapp. George Turbervile. Cyril Turner. Vathek. Sir John Vanbrugh. Henry Vaughan. Lewis Wager. Edmund Waller. Isaac Walton. Mr. Walwyn. Osborne Sidney Wandesford. Edward Ward. Thomas Ward. Robert Waring. Thomas War ton. J. Warton. Isaac Watts. John Webster. Jane West. Matthew West. PRODUCTIONS REFERRED TO. John Weston. George Wither. George Whetstones. George Murgatroyd Woodward. William Whitaker. William Wordsworth. William Whitehead. James Worsdale. William Wilkie. Sir Thomas Wyatt. Richard Wilkinson. William Wycherley. Robert Wilmot. Robert Yarrington. John Wilson. Edward Young. Anne Countess of Winchilsea. Lawrence Young ; and certain Jane Wiseman. other miscellaneous references. FLOWERS OF FANCY, ABH ABHOR it like the plague. Banks. Abhor it worse than the air breathed from infection. Peaps. Abhor his arms more than an aspic's twine, or scorpion's clasp. Goring. Abhorred as hell. Blackmore. ABORTIVE as the first-born bloom of spring nipped with the lagging rear of winter's frost. Milton. ABSURD as to strive against the stream. Spenser. as from men's prosperity or sufferings to conclude their innocence or guilt. South. as to hope for constancy in the wind. Byron. as to seek to pacify the sea with tears. Glapthorne. as to en- deavour to unite the contrarieties of spring and winter. Dr. Johnson. as to endeavour to quench fire with oil. Quarles. as to endeavour to increase the splendor of the sun by a lighted taper. H. Blair. as to deny that two and two make four in arithmetic. South. as to expect harvest in the dead of win- ter. Ibid. as the belief of a plain contradiction. Tillotson. ABSURDITY as monstrous, as if a painter should draw a coward running from a battle, and tell us it was the picture of Alexan- der the Great. Dry den. ACCEPTABLE as provision to a starving city. Dr. Johnson. ACTIVE as the sun. Watts. as day. Mrs. Brooke. as the B ADA light. Hopkins, in Dryden's Miscellany. as fire. Drayton, Glapthorne, $ others. as celestial fire. Sharp. as flame. Mallet. as the air. J. Shirley. as the roe. N. Cotton. Ac- tive, wild, and free as Conception, when she breeds ideas. Cawthorn. ADAPTED to it as light is to the eyes, or truth to the under- standing. Akenside. ADDLED like an egg. Fielding. ADORNED like May blooming in sweets and bright with spring- ing beauties. L. Theobald. She is more adorned in her tears than plants by sparkling dew. Play, Peruvian. ADVERSE as pole to pole. Burke. AFFRIGHT. Thy touch affrights me as a serpent's sting. Shakes- pear. AGREEABLE as the distant sound of the harp, when it comes in the evening on the soft rustling breeze of the vale. Ossian. ALERT as Cupid. Lyttelton. ALIKE as two silver drops of dew. Beaumont fy Fletcher. One pearl of dew kissing the drooping cheeks of flowers in May, is not so like another. John Smith, Alike as two drops of water. Dryden. All alike as sands on the shore. Byron. ALLURING as the vernal gale wafting the fragrance of the spicy dale. W. Richardson. ALONE like a rock left by the ebbing sea. Ossian. like a rock in a sandy vale. Ibid. AMBITIOUS as the devil. Beaumont fy Fletcher. AMOROUS as May. Recreation for ingenious Head Pieces. as youthful May. Play, Albumazar, by Tomkis. as the sun that kisses all the beauties of the spring. Behn. as an Arca- dian. Colman. as the dove. Merry, AMPLE as heaven. Marston. Bounty, ample as the wind. Dryden. ANCIENT as the world. Lansdowne. ATT ANGRY as a tiger. J. Shirley. as a wasp. Gascoigne, J. Dames. as a pismire. Chaucer. Angry and malicious as a viper. Ha- rington. ANSWER him like an echo. Jonson. ANXIOUS as a mother watching the first faint tinge of health revisiting her child's wan cheek. Landon. APPARENT as the sun is clear. Sylvester. APPREHENSIVE. She hath a spirit and temper apprehen- sive as lightning, and as swift in execution. Sir W. Scott. Full of apprehension as an old soldier upon the guard of a counterscarp. Southern. APT as new fallen snow takes any dint. Shakespear. ARDENT as those flames that singed the world by heedless Phaeton. Marston. ARROGANT as the devil. Divine Masque, 1660. ARTLESS as unpractised infancy. Dryden's Troilus. as the infancy of truth. Ibid. ASPIRING as fire. Higgons' dedication to Cowley. ASTONISHED as a man who walking in the grass, upon a ser- pent suddenly doth tread. Drayton, in England's Parnassus. as he who unawares has trod upon a snake. Dryden. as one who unawares, with heedless tread, has crushed a snake, that swoln with poison lay in slumber rolled amid the grassy way. Hooles Ariosto. Astonished stood, as one that had espied infernal furies with their chains untied. Spenser. as one that has been stricken with a flash of lightning. Palace of Pleasure, by William Painter. Astonished and confounded, as if they were struck dumb and senseless by a blast of thun- der. R. Hurst. ASUNDER. As far asunder as the poles. E. Young. ATTENTION. Enforce attention like deep harmony. Tate. ATTRACT like a magnet. Fragments, Greek Tragic Theatre. More attractive than a loadstone. R. Wilkinson. Whose as- B2 A US pect even like a comet did attract all eyes with admiration, won- der, and amazement. Play, Swetnam Arraigned. By a strange attractive force drawn, as the adamant draws the iron, or the jet the straw. R. Greene's Arcadia. As opening buds attract the wandering bee. M. Robinson. AUSTERE as Cato. R. Greene. as Zeno. Pope. AWFUL as a God. Gildon, Addison. as the God who flings his thunder round. Dryden. Awful and bright as lightnings shine. Watts. AZURE as the skies. Mickle's Lusiad. B. JjALD as time. R. Brome. as a looking-glass. Marmion. BALMY as the dew which the morn sheds on the rose's cheek. Glapthorne. as cordials that recover souls. Lee, Gildon. BANEFUL as death. N. Rome. as the pestilential wind, W. H. Ireland. BARBAROUS as the seas or wind. Charles Hopkins, in Dry- den's Miscellany. BARE as winter. Burns. as January. Armin. as an anatomy. Marston. as new-born Venus rising from the sea. Gibber. as my nail. Play, Like mill to like. BARK as loud as Cerberus. Dr. Johnson. BARREN as the sand. Quarles. as the sand upon the sea- shore. Tillotson. as banks of Libya. Shakespear. as the desert sand. Play, Forgery. Barrener than the sea shore. South. as leafless boughs in winter time. Pollok. BASE as treason. C. Hopkins. as the dirt beneath my feet. Watts. Base and unlustrous as the smoky light that is fed by stinking tallow. Shakespear. Baser than envy. Leanerd. BASELESS as the fantastic visions of the evening. N. Cotton. BASHFUL as virgins. Margaret Duchess of Newcastle. B E A BEAR away, like an ever-rolling stream. Watts. Bear it with me, as the rushing wind bears the cloud onward. Byron. BEAUTEOUS as a goddess. Thomas Baker. as Venus when she rose from ocean's bed. G. P. Bromley. as an angel. Behn, Sotheby. as lovers' eyes. Suckling. His lovely child the fost'ring Graces rear'd. Not on Eurotas' banks so beauteous shone The faithless partner of the Spartan throne, Not she who eonquer'd whom the world obey'd, On Cydnus when in pomp of charms array'd, Mortals deceiv'd, in awful rapture gaz'd, And incense to the present goddess blaz'd. Translation of Voltaire's Henriade. as a summer sun. Chatterton. as the sunny beam, which glittering dances on the limpid stream. Poetical Calendar. as the opening day, when on the spangling waves the sun- beams play. Chatterton. Beauteous and bright is he among the tribes, as when the sun attired in glistering robe comes dancing from his oriental gate. Peele. More beauteous than the day. Quarles. than the dawn of summer's day. Harriet Falconer. as the morn. Carey, W. Richardson. as the blush- ing morn. Otmay. She is beauteous as the radiant face of blushing morning, when the golden east discloses her with all her train of graces to the enraptured eyes. James Templeton. as the morn in May. J. Hewitt. as May. Sotheby's Oberon. as the glorious frame of heaven. Play, Jack Drum's Enter- tainment. as the spring, When from the vi'let-woven couch awak'd By frolic zephyr's hand, her tender cheek Graceful she lifts, and blushing, from her bower Issues to clothe in gladsome glist'ring green The genial globe. T. Warton. as the first blossoms of the spring before the common sun has kissed their sweets away. Behn. as the budding flower ex- haling sweetness in its vernal hour. Lines by the author of BE A Taliesin's Poem. as the bloom of May. W. Richardson. as a new blown flower. Play, Fatal Discovery, or Love in Ruins. as a rose. Pasquil's Nightcap. as a lily. A. Cherry. as the hyacinth. Ear on. BEAUTIFUL as the day. /. Shirley, Durfey, $ others. More beautiful than the sun. Wisdom of Solomon. than the rising sun. O. S. Wandesford. Beautiful as the sun going into the sea. Giacomo Greber. Beautiful as is the gorgeous palace of the sun. T. Heywood. as the light of the morning when the sun riseth. Sacred Script. as a morning without clouds. Ibid. as the blushing morning. Durfey. as rosy mornings in the pleasing month of May. Play, Different Widows. as the smiles of the morning. Play, Selima fy Azor. More beau- tiful than the grey-eyed morn drest in her clearest robes, such as adorn her in the spring. Play, Love a la mode. Beautiful as nature in the spring. Wandesford. as the stars. Holyday. as the imperial star of Jove. Cornwall. More beautiful than is the morning or midnight star. Joyner. Beautiful as was bright Lucifer before his fall. Marlowe. as the moon. S. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Literature. as sunset clouds. Cornwall. as summer's evening skies. R. Shiel. as summer's glowing eve. Landon. as May. Ibid. as May the glory of the year, when first she comes arrayed all beauteous with the robes of heaven. Bruce. as light descending on the darkened sight. Landon. as heaven. Day. like the showery bow when it shows its lovely head on the lake, and the setting sun is bright. Ossian. Beautiful and bright as the full moon. Dry den. as Venus. R. Greene, Centlivre, fy others. More beautiful than love's queen. R. Greene. than the bright Cyprian goddess. C. Johnson. Beautiful as Juno graced with Cytherea's zone. Fenton. as an angel. C. Shadwell, Jane Wiseman, fy others. as pearls hidden in their shell. Sale's Koran. Beautiful and fair as orient pearls and rubies are. Sir P. Sidney. More beautiful than precious sardonyx, or purple rocks of amethysts, or glist'ring hyacinth. Play, Taming of a Shrew. Beautiful as martyrs' visions. Centlivre. as Eden. Banks. as the BL A blossoms of spring. /. Hervey. as is the rose. R. Estcourt. as a rose newly blown. Higden, R. Wilkinson. as the flower of meekness on a stem of grace. J. Montgomery. as the wings of a dove covered with silver. Sacred Script. There was once a time, had virtue worn the perfect form of beauty, or clothed it in an angel's robe of radiance, it would have looked like her. P. Francis. BEGUILE him, as the mournful crocodile with sorrow snares relenting passengers. ShaJcespear. BELLOW like a savage bull. Broomc. as bulls. Sacred Script., fy others. like a cow. E. Ward. BELOVED as much as the children of old age. Preston's notes on App. Rhodius. BEND like lilies overcharged with rain. Carew. like a droop- ing lily charged with rain. Poetical Calendar. Behold that beauteous maid ! her languid head bends like a lily charged with rain. Melpomene, a Poem. Bend like roses crushed with falling rain. Fenton. like the trunk of an aged oak. Ossian. Like a feeble flower o'ercharg'd with rain bends to earth the weeping head. Philip Francis. Stoop not thy head, that like a pale rose bends upon its yielding stalk. R. Shiel. BENEVOLENT as heaven. Massinger, Hayley. BEWITCH like Calypso. R.Greene. Bewitching like the wan- ton mermaids' songs. Shakespear. BEYOND. She esteemed this as much above his wisdom, as astonishment is beyond bare admiration. South. BITE like pepper. Gay. BITTER to me as death. Shakespear. as coloquintida. Ibid. as wormwood. Sacred Script., Burton, fy others. as gall. Gascoigne, R. Greene, fy others. BLACK as night. /. Jones, Goff, fy others. as midnight. Sir W. Scott. as darkest midnight. R. Shiel. as darkest night. Fairfax. as pitchy night. Spenser. as a stormy night. Dry- BL A den. as the winter night. Chatterton. Blacker than a star- less night. A, Cowley. as eternal night's unchanging shades. N. Rome. as night's swarthy mantle. Play, Sicily and Na- ples, or Fatal Union. as darkness. Play, Thornby Abbey. as deepest darkness. Lilly. as Cimmerian darkness. Beau- mont fy Fletcher. as death. Greene, Shakespear, fy others. as hell. Sackville, Shakespear, fy others. as Styx. Dray- ton, J. Beaumont. as Acheron. Shakespear, Morton. as the shades of hell. Durfey. as the gloom of hell. J, Hervey. Black and sullen as a storm. N. Rone. as a stormy night. Dryden. as clouds that low'r. Poem, Fragments of Fingal. He looked black as the sea before the heavily charged thun~ der clouds that canopy it dissolve themselves in rain. Tale of the Passions, in the Liberal. Look black as thunder. P. Pin- dar. as the whirlwinds of the north. Garrick, in Dodsley's Collection. as guilt. A. Hill. as sin can make me. Mead. Sin, black as murder. Dekker. as soot. Harington, Sir W. Davenant, < others. as Vulcan in the smoke of war. Shakes- pear. as if besmeared in hell. Ibid. Blacker than a coal. Sacred Script. Black as a coal. Chaucer, Lidgate, fy others. as cinder. Poem, Paddy Hen. as pitch. Lidgate, Spenser, fy others. like an oven. Sacred Script. as chimney stocks. E. Ward. as winter chimney or well-polished jet. J. Phillips. as jet. Chaucer, Lidgate, fy others. as pitch or polished jet. Harington. as ebony. Shakespear. as the smooth jet, or glossy raven's back. Gay. as a raven. Sacred Script., T. Killigrew, fy others. as the raven's wing. G. Peele, Prior, $ others. as the wing of the night raven. Sir W. Scott. as the raven's plumes. T. Heynood, Pope, fy others. as raven plumage. Landon. as a crow. Chaucer, Shakespear, fy others. as the feathers of a crow. Chaucer. as a sloe. Chaucer, Durfey, fy others. as autumn sloe. Drayton. as a berry. Chaucer. as ink. Barclay, Spenser, $ others. as sable. Chaucer, Gorver, $ others. as a mourning weed. A. Servard. as funeral pall. Sir W. Scott. as the tongue of in- famy. /. Shirley. as infamy can make him. Cumberland. BLI Blacker than a Moor. A. Conley, Play, Intriguing Widow. than the skin of Moors. N. Lee. Her soul was blacker than an Ethiop's dye. John Tracy. as an ouzel. Chapman. BLAND. An odour all bland, as ocean-breezes gather from the flowers that blossom in Elysium. T. Moore. Sounds, as bland as Zephyrus when first he wakes the spring. Andrew Beckett. BLAST like lightning. Hughes, Sir Thomas Moore, $ otJters. like lightning's transient fires. Poetical Calendar. Blast, burn and consume like lightning. C. Davenant. Blast it sudden as lightning does the mountain heath. Macklin. like the mildew. Shakespear, Whitaker. Like a mildewed ear blasting his* wholesome brother. Shakespear. Blast like a northern wind, the opening buds. Centlivre. like a basilisk, each one they look on. A. Hill. like the pestilence. Delap, Southey. BLAZE like the sun. S. Rousseau s Flowers of Persian Litera- ture. like a star of the first magnitude. Sir John Denham. Blaze fierce as a comet. Milton. like flaming pitch. Quarles. Blazing as a meteor. /. Smith. like roving meteors. W. Thompson. BLESSED as the pleasing dreams of holy men. R. Blair. BLIGHT like lightning. Play, Roving Husband reclaimed. BLIND as ignorance. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as death. Ibid. as hell. Habington. as fortune. Dryden. as upstart great- ness. Lillo. as Cupid. Sir W. Davenant, Fred. Reynolds. as love. Mead, T. Killigrem, others. as moles. Beau- mont fy Fletcher, Sylvester, fy others as owls amidst the glare of day. Doyne's Tasso. as bats, Sylvester, A. Maclaren. as a buzzard. Otmay. as a beetle. Chapman, Sir W. Davenant, 8f others. as the Cyclop. Dryden. as a stone. Chaucer. Blind and silent as the night. Sir W. Davenant. BLITHE as youth. B. Hoole. as May. P. Hoare. Blithesome as the sun. Grainger. Blithe as the day. H. Ward. as the rays that cheer the blushing morn. A. Cherry. Blithe and lusty as the summer. C. Gibber. as a kid. Ramsay. as lamb- BLO kin on a morn of May. /. Hogg. Blithe and artless as the lambs on the lea. Burns, Blithe as birds in spring. C. Dibdin. as birds on the tree. Dry den's Miscellany. Sing as blithe as thrushes. L. Macnally. Blithe as the linnet sings in the green wood. Robin Hood, an entertainment. as bird of morning's light. G. Peele. as a lark. Play, Wandering Boys. as morn- ing lark. A. Seward. as the soaring lark. Somervile. BLOOM like a rose. Sir W. Scott. Her cheeks like roses bloom. Sir W. Jones. She bloomed like the rose of paradise. James Hogg. like the desert's lily. Shenstone. like the spring. Banks. like May. H. Carey. Bloom lovely as spring. Po- etical Calendar. BLOOMING as the spring. Dryden. as May. Prior, T. Brere- mood, $ others. as the month of May. Pope. as the son of Maia. Glover. as the dawn. T. Moore. as health. Fawkes. as a goddess. Pope. as a bride. Poetical Calendar. BLOSSOM as the rose. Sacred Script. They blossomed nu- merous as the flowery spring. Smollett. BLOW like sweet roses in the summer air. Shakespear. Blow rough and high like a tempest. South. BLUE as the over-arching skies. Southey. as the freezing sky. Poolers Parnassus. like the sky in April. Sir W. Jones. Eyes, blue as a June sky when stars light up its deep clear mid- night. Landon. Eyes, blue as the sky of summer. N. Drake. as the skies. Farce, Who is afraid. as the heavens. /. Wil- son, author of Isle of Palms. Eye, blue as heaven. Byron. as azure. Randolph. as sapphire. Sir P. Sidney, in England's Parnassus, Vathek. as a bilberry. Poetical Calendar. as the welkin. Marston. as steel. R. Wilkinson. BLUNT as ignorance. S. Rowley. as fencers' foils. Shakespear. BLUSH like day's first dawn. Glover. like day-break. Landon. Blushing like the morn. Sir W. Davenant, Milton, fy others. like the virgin morn. Congreve. like the perfumed morn. R. B. Slieridan. Like the morn thou dost in blushes shine. Sir BOI W. Davenant. Like the morn in blushes rise. Crown. Such was the infant morn when it first brake, and blushed to see the chaos left behind her. Wilson. Fair Venus like the breaking morn, with virgin blushes does the plain adorn. Play, Battle of Aughrim. Blush like the purple morn. Addison. Her face was like the blushing of the east when Titan charged the morning sun to rise. R. Greene. Blush like a fair morning in May. Sir P. Sidney. like Aurora. Durfey, C. Johnson. like Aurora's lip. Byron. like Aurora's cheeks. H. Neele. Blush as if modesty herself had there lain in a bed of coral. Randolph. She was rosed over with the virgin crimson of modesty. Shakespear. Her cheeks are deeper dyed in scar- let than the chaste morning's blushes. A. Cowley. Blush as deep as crimson. The Forced Marriage, in Foote's Comic The- atre. Blushing as a bride. Pollok. Blushing fair like bride herself. Poem, Grecian Story. like a virgin bride. Collins. like the sunset. Beaumont fy Fletcher. like the last beam of evening thrown on a white cloud. Sir W. Scott. Blush red as any glowing flame. Turbervile. Blush like a rose bud in a bush. Play, Peeping Tom. Blush like a rose. Sir W. Dave- nant 8f others. like a blown rose. Beaumont fy Fletcher. like any opening rose. Sir W. Scott. like vernal roses. Penrose. like the rose, when the enamoured spring by kissing blows soft blushes on her cheek. Habington. The rose buds now are blooming on your cheeks, and ope themselves into a crimson blush. Play, Fatal Union. Blushing as the crimson rose. J. Dames, Scourge of Folly. Blushing as red as a rose. Edw. Fairfax, Holcroft. like roses in the early morn. G. R. Dixon. Blushing like the rose's flower opening to the day. Sir W. Scott. Blush like the fair summer rose. J. Stagg. BLUSTER like the north wind. Centlivre, Poems on State Af- fairs. Blustering as the wind. Coolie's Hesiod. BODING as ravens. E. Young. BOISTEROUS as the sea. Pope. as March. Sir W. Scott. as the winds. Yalden, in Dryden's Miscellany. BOL BOLD as day. W. Wordsworth. as Paul in the presence of Agrippa. W. Corvper as Daniel in the lions' den. Byron. as Curtius. Penrose. as a Centaur at a feast. Sir W. Dave- nant. as Mars. Ambrose Philips, N. Lee. Bold as if gifted with ten thousand lives. T. Moore. as lions. Chapman, T. Ward, 8$ others. as lions vexed with hunger. Glapthornc. as a mountain wolf. Chatter ton. as a ravenous wolf amid the tender flocks. Quarles. as, a dying saint. Settle. BOTTOMLESS as the heavens are in extension infinite. H. Shirley. as hell. B. Jonson, Taylor, fy others. BOUND like a doe. J. Caulfeild. like a mountain roe. J. Wil- son, author of Isle of Palms. Bounding along like a sportive fawn. Ibid. like a roe-buck. Sir W. Scott. Bound fast, as Prometheus to Caucasus. Shakespear. BOUNDLESS as a God. Settle. as the heavens. T. Heyrvood. as space. Byron. as the sea. Shakespear, Otnay, fy others , as the sky. Drayton. as the air. G. S. Green. as the wind. Otnay, Swift. as the blooms of spring. Akenside. as thought, as elemental fire. C. Johnson. as ambition. Savage. BOUNTEOUS as nature. Dryden. as clouds to earth. B. Jon- son. as the air. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as the air which fed Israel when manna fell from heaven for bread. Southey. as autumn. Play, Sulieman. BOUNTIFUL as autumn. Shakespear as April rains. W. Conper. as the showers that fall into the spring's green bosom. J. Shirley. as mines of India. Shakespear. BOW down his head as a bulrush. Sacred Script. Bowed her head like the drooping lily. Jane West. BRAVE as Alcides. Smith. as Hercules. Durfey. as Philip's son. Play, The Three Lords of London. as Caesar. Ramsay, W. O'Brien. as a lion. Cobb, Sheridan, 8? others. as the summer. Lord Thurlon. as steel. Sir W. Scott. Brave the deep yawning gulf like Curtius for his country's sake. Jenyns. Brave as brave may be. Devices of Sundry Gentlemen. B R I BREAK like glass. Lansdowne. like a bubble. Thomson. BREAK forth. Then shall thy light break forth as the morn- ing. Sacred Script. like day. Goff, Shirley. Break out like a sun slipping from behind a cloud. Play, Wits led by the nose. BREATHE soft as a whispering summer's evening's gale. Play, Neglected Firtue. In softest accents whisper your consent, O breathe it gently as a western breeze. B. Martyn. Breathe out destruction like a raging pestilence. Ibid. Breathe as short as a new taken sparrow. Shakespear. BRIGHT as the sun. Chaucer, Goner, fy others. as the golden sun. Cumberland. as the golden sun in cloudless skies. Poem, Aurelia. as a new born sun. R. Montgomery. as the sum- mer sun. Dryden's Miscellany. more bright than summer suns. Somervile. as the rising sun. Randolph, South, 8f others. as the rising sun in summer's day. Pope. as the rising of the golden sun. R. Shiel. as the morning sun. Old Ballad Henry Catherine, N. Rone, 8f others. as the first sun when on the eastern shore he rises fresh and decks the infant day. C. Saunders. as the sun amid the golden orient. R. Shiel. as the glory of the dazzling sun. Wandesford. as the glorious sun. Death of Abel, an oratorio. as Phcebus. Lidgate, Peacham. as Phoebus' sphere. Wyatt. Brighter than Phoe- bus in his glittering pride. T. Forde. than Phcebus' rays. R. Wilkinson. than Phcebus in the southern skies. W. Balm- ford. than glist'ring Phoebus when the fields are fired. Alex- ander Earl of Sterline. than the god of day. Durfey. than the beams of the sun. R. Greene. than glittering Phce- bus' beams when at his rise he gilds the eastern streams. /. Dancer. Bright his eyes as solar beams reflecting tempered light from crystal streams. Prior. as noon. Sylvester, Watts, fy others. as noon day. N. Lee. as an August noon. London. as the beam of noon. Ossian. as the noon day's stainless beam. Mallet. as the noon day's sun. Play, Traitor to himself, M. Clancy, fy others. Brighter than the sun at noon. Durfey. BRI than the eye of noon. Quarks. Bright and clear as the noon sun. Duchess of Newcastle. Bright as the noon-tide sun. T. Heywood. as the noon-tide splendor of the sun. Doyne's Tasso. as radiant noon-tide hours. Farvkes. Made the place as bright as if the sun had shone therein at twelve o'clock at noon. Lidgate. Brighter than mid-day Phoebus. Quarles. than the mid-day sun. Gildon, Carey, fy others. Brightly burning as the mid-day sun. Play, Spanish Tragedy. Bright as the glories of the mid-day sun. Churchill. Bright and clear as mid-day sunshine. Carvthorn. Bright as the radiance of meridian day. Jephson. as the meridian sun which dazzles all beholders. Centlivre. as Hyperion's beams. The Phoe- nician Damsels, in Greek Tragic Theatre. as a sun-beam. John Bale, H. Shirley. Brighter than Phoebus' fiery pointed beams. England's Parnassus. Not brighter beams the star of day-break, or Phoebus from his orient sky. Charles A. Elton. than Phoebus' rays. R. Wilkinson. than Phoebus' rays when he with all his lustre darts his fiery sparkling beams. Play, St. Cecily. as the sunny ray. Spenser. as meridian rays. Ramsay. as the orient ray. J. Hogg. Brighter than sun-shine. Marlowe in England's Parnassus, Shepherds' Lottery. Bright as the sun-shine before a storm. Ossian. Brighter than the sun in summer when no clouds cast shadows from the middle region. Play, Rome's Follies. than great Phoebus' car. J. Taylor. than the chariot of the sun. 7. Shirley. than the burnished palace of the sun, the eye-sight of the glorious fir- mament. Play, Taming of a Shrew. than Apollo's crown. Marlowe. Bright as Apollo's rays. Mrs. S. Gunning. Bright and declining as a setting sun. Watts. as the breaking east. Beaumont fy Fletcher, T. Betterton. as the orient beam that illumines our sky. A. Cherry. as Aurora. Swift, Bullock, fy others. as Aurora's car. Hayley as the morn. Play, Look about you, Randolph, fy others. as the morn or new created light. W. Harrison. as orient morn. Akenside. as the ray of morn. Mason. as morning's ray. Scott of Amwell. as the morning. G. Sandys, Thurlow, fy others. as when from the BRI crimson curtains of the morn the sun appearing in his glory throws new robes of beauty o'er heaven and earth. M. Bruce. as the blush of morn. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. Bright and blushing as the morn. Hawkesworth. Bright as the blush of rising morn. Darwin s Botanic Garden. Bright as the blush- ing morning's beams. E. Settle. as the beauties of the blush- ing morn when all the azure ports of heaven unbarred, let forth the streaming day. Goring. as the morn which gives the flowers their beauty, and welcome as the gale which wafts their sweetness. O'Keeffe. as the morn when smiling on the hills ; earth, air, and sea with vernal joy she fills. T. Scott, in Dodsley's Collection. Brighter than the beams of the clear sun at morning, when he flings his showers of light upon the peach, or plays with the green leaves of June, and strives to dart into some great forest's heart, and scare the sylvan from(yolaptuous dreams. B. Cornwall. Bright as the morning's fresh expanded beam. W. Hawkins. Eyes, brighter than the orient beam. D. Hayes. as a summer's morn when all the heaven is streaked with dappled fires. Play, Duke of Guise. serenely bright like a summer's morn. G. Walker. as the virgin blushes of the morn. Southern. as the blushes of the roseate morn. Mickle's Lusiad. as the lustre that waits on the morn. Jane West. Bright and beauteous as Aurora's ray, when from the east she gilds the new born day. A. Pasquin. as morning from her Tithon's bed. Randolph. as the morn from ocean's wavy bed. C. H. Johnson. as the coming forth of the morning. Ossian. Brighter than the morning sky. F. Brooke, Poetical Calendar, fy others. than the lucid spring. A. Semard. than the shining spring. Ibid. Bright as morn in the sweet May. R. Shiel. Brighter than May's first morn. N. Lee. than the burnished gates from whence Latona's lordly sun doth march, when mounted on his coach tinselled with flames he triumphs in the beauty of the heavens. Play, Orlando Furioso. Bright as clouds that deck the morning skies. Edinburgh Collection. as the first sun when on the eastern shore he rises fresh and decks the infant day. C. Saunders. Brighter than the morn BRI whose orient beams the May adorn. G. Jeffreys, in Poetical Calendar. Bright as day. Chaucer, Spenser, 8$ others. as a summer's day. Hughes. as the rising day. R. Bloomfield. as new-born day. Otway. as the orb of day. Pope. as day's eye. Weber's old metrical romances. as the orient beam of day. Penrose. as the orient day. G. Murgatroyd. as mid-day. A. Marvel. Brighter than the blaze of day. Caw- thorn. Shine bright as smiling day. G. Fletcher. Bright and awful as the beam of day. Pye. Shine as bright as sun by day, or moon by night. E. Ward. Bright seerns the season as the new born spring when every flower puts forth its freshest fragrance, and infant nature breathes her sweets around. W. Hawkins. as heaven. Otway, Ogilvie. as high heaven. Waller. as is the heaven crystalline. Play, Taming of a Shrew. Bright and merciful as heaven. Buckingham. as the firmament. Sylvester. as the sky. Spenser, Thomson. as sum- mer skies. Landon. as unclouded skies. C. Hopkins, in Dry- den's Miscellany. as the summer. Goldsmith. Brighter than the smile of summer. A. L. Aikin. Bright as the world was in its infant years. Banks. as light unclouded. Boyle, Earl of Orrery. Bright and piercing as the light. South. Bright and resistless as celestial light. Hodson. as lightning. Hughes. His eyes are like the lightning bright. Alfieri's Tragedies by C. Lloyd. Whose conceits are bright and vivid as the lightning. Sir W. Scott. as Jove's dire bolts. Broome. As bright, as flaming as the bolt of Jove. Preston's App. Rhodius. Brighter than polished marble when reflecting light. Congreve. Bright like the streak of light in a cloud when the broad sun comes forth. Ossian. Bright as the lightning's blaze, the hero shone. Doyne's Tasso. More bright and beautiful than first created light. C. Davenant. Bright as the moon. G. Chapman, T. Forde, Sf others. as the moon she shone with silent light. Congreve. as the lamp of night. Pope. as the silver moon. Play, Pinder of Wakefield. as silver Phoebe mounted on the high top of the ruddy element. R. Greene. Bright as shines the silver moon through the transparent bosom of the deep. Shake- BRI spear. Brighter than Cynthia's silver bow. C. Cotton. Se- renely bright as Cynthia's silver beams. J. Sterling. Bright as Cynthia burnishing the night. Durfey. as Cynthia's beam that with soft lustre dances on the stream. Poem, Fragments of Fin gal. as the moon in autumn. Ossian. as the moon on the western wave. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. as the moon's refulgent beam. Southey. as a star. Chaucer, J. Shirley, $ others. Benignly bright as stars to mariners. E. Young. Brighter than a blazing star. Somervile. Bright as the au- tumnal star. Blackmore. Brighter than any planet or star.. Hughes. not brighter shines by night the milky way. Poems on State Affairs. Bright as the silver star that leads the day. A. Seward. as the star of evening. Akenside. as the evening star. Play, Fickle Shepherdess. T. Killigrew. as the morning star. Spenser, Dekker, fy others. as the star of morn. Pollok. as the star that leads the vernal morn. A. Seward. like twinkling stars. Spenser. like glistering stars. Sylvester. as Sirius rising from the main. Preston's App. Rhodius. In the evening brighter far than the ocean-bathed star. Salma- gundy. Bright as that resplendent star that darts his light at close of day. Preston's App. Rhodius. More bright than is the starry senate of the night. Habington. Bright as stars are in a frosty night Duke of Newcastle. Brighter than stars that twinkle in a winter's night. Dryden. Bright as the stars that gild the throne of night. G. Townsend. Brighter than the lamps of heaven. Play, Taming of a Shrew. C. Marlowe. Bright as the burning lamp of heaven. G. Peele. Brighter than all the stars that deck the heavens. Home. than all the glittering train of nymphs that wait on Cynthia, when she takes her progress in pursuit of the swift enchased deer over the Cretan or Athenian hills, or when attended with those lesser stars, she treads the azure circle of the heavens. Mar- mion. than Cynthia's shining train of stars. N. Rome. than Hesper's beam. Shenstone. Bright as Lucifer, Hesper, Ves- per. A. Brewer, J. Leanerd, fy others. as Venus in her glit- tering sphere. Shakespear. as Love's star when it riseth. C BRI Jonson. A crown of flames brighter than that which Ariadne wears of fixed stars. /. Shirley. Bright as in that even when Ariadne crowned, was through the galaxy in pomp led, mil- lions of stars all burning o'er her head. T. Heyrvood. as the immortal twins that grace the skies. Hughes. Bright mid these scenes of gloom, as spangled stars strown on the ebon throne of awful night. J. Dillon. Bright as the sky in a frosty night. Play, Roving Husband reclaimed. as fire. Lidgate, G. Peele, Fanshan. as Eoan fire. Play, Untrussing of the Humorous Poet. as the pillar rose at Heaven's com- mand, when Israel marched along the desert. Campbell. as the pillar of sacred fire that stood above the sons of Israel when they camped at midnight by the foot of Horeb. PolloTc. as the wise men's torch which guided them to God's sweet babe when born at Bethlehem. Herrick. as a blaze. Buckingham. as flame. Psalms, by Brady fy Tate. as a me- teor. Mr. May's King Asa, G. Walker. Bright and beau- tiful as May day. C. Burney. Bright and blooming as the spring. Buckingham. Brighter than the tears of morning. Sir W. Jones. Bright as the dew-drops on the thorn. Fawkes. as drops of dew in a May morning. Sir W. Scott. as the appearance of the bow that is in the cloud in the day of rain. Sacred Script. as the bow of heaven. Ossian. as the cove- nant-insuring bow. W. Conper. as the bow that spans the storm. Campbell. as a rainbow on streams. Ossian. Brighter than Iris blushes after rain. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Bright and gay as shines the heavenly bow. Jenyns. Brighter than beam the rainbow hues of light, or than the evening glories which the sun slants o'er the moving many-colour'd sea. Southey. Bright as rainbow hues or dawning light. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as innocence. J. Day. as the hue of healthy innocence. G. Servell. as truth. Mallet. Play, Major Andre. as virtue. South, E. Moore. as the tear in beauty's eye. Byron. Brighter than fame. Play, Heroic Friendship. Form, bright as angels'. Pix. as an angel. Swift, Parnell, fy others. as a cherubim. Durfey. as the eyes of angels. W. Thomp- BRI son. as the eyes of seraphs. Ibid. as young beauty's azure eye. ft. Bloomfeld. as the wings of angels. J. Hervey. as the queen of love. Play, The True Trojans. as Venus. Mar- mion. as a goddess. /. Banks, Dryden. as Pandora, made by all the gods to allure the stubborn heart of the first man. C. Gildon. as a God. L. Theobald, Sir W. Jones. Brighter art thou than flaming Jupiter when he appeared to hapless Semele. Marlorve. Bright and spotless as the golden lamps which burn before the sacred throne of Love. W. Thompson. as gold. Chaucer, Lidgate, fy others. as gold from the refining flame. W. Mason. as burnished gold. Play, Arraignment of Paris. Herrick, fy others. No gold nor orient pearl could look so bright. Harington, Bright as any silver. Play, Gammer Gurton's Needle. Goner, others. as polished silver. Pol- whele's Theocritus. Brighter than steel. Lidgate. Bright as brass. Fielding. as a gemmed tiara. Sir W. Jones. as dia- monds. G. E. Howard, Prince Hoare. as young diamonds in their infant dew. Dryden. as the sunny diamond's blaze. Jane West. as polished stones. J. Watts. as crystal. Gorver, Dryden, Sf others. as glass. Chaucer, Gascoigne, fy others. as shining glass. Fairfax. Bright and smooth as any looking- glass. Jonson. as a ruby. S. Foote. More sanguine bright than the carbuncle. Harington. as beryl. Ancient. Brighter than beryl or clear crystal. Play, Candlemas Day. Brighter than is the silver Rhodope. Marlorve. as the eagle's eye. Shakespear. as flowers of May. Play, Paragraph. as the bloom of May. G. Keate. as a lily. Sir W. Scott. as the water lily. Shenstone. as the lily of the vale. Sir W.Jones. as the snow-clad lily. The Shamrock, a Collection of Poems. as spring-blossoms after sunny showers. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as butterflies. Byron. as the dew. H.Carey. as the dewy lawn. J. Dillon. as dew upon the hill. Chapman. as the dew-drop on the brow of morn. A. Seward. Tears, bright and pure as the dew of morning. Reine Canziani. as snow. Shenstone, Sir W. Jones, 8f others. Brighter than C2 B RI mountain snows at noon. Southey. Bright as the new fallen snow. M. R. Mitford. More bright the tears by true affection shed, Than morning's tremulous gems of balmy dew, Gay twinkling on the violet's purple bed. John Bidlake. as visions of expiring maids. Pope. BRIGHTEN like the day when sudden winds sweep scattered clouds away. Young. as the Iris. Byron. Brighten in her presence as a rock before the sudden beams of the sun, when they issue from a broken cloud. Ossian. like the full moon of heaven when the clouds vanish away and leave her calm and broad in the midst of the sky. Ibid. BRILLIANT as the sun. Cawthorn. like the morn. Lord Rokeby. as a star. John Hanway. as the morning star. G. Towmend. as diamonds. Sir W. Scott. as rain drops when the western sun sees his own miniature of beams in each. Montgomery. BRISK as Cupid. Lyttelton as a dancing-master. Durfey. as a snake in merry May, that just has cast his slough away. Somervile. as bottled ale. Gay. Brisk and lively as a bird. E. Ward. as a bee. R. Drury, J. Bickerstajf, fy others. as the wanton winds that kiss the beauty of the blooming spring. Durfey. BRITTLE as glass. Chaucer, Shakespear, fy others. BROAD as day -light. South. as a buckler or targe. Chaucer. as Amazonian targe. Milton. An eye as broad as a buck- ler. A. Fraunce. as a warrior's shield. Montgomery. as the deluge. Mirandola. Broader than the sea. Sacred Script. Broad in his own dimensions as the sea. Glapthorne. as barn doors. J. Heynood. Broad and deep as hell. /. Banks. BROKEN as the tumbling surges which the winds wake at ran- dom. Sir W. Scott. BROWN in hue as hazel nuts. Shakespear. as a berry. Chau- cer, G. Douglas, fy others. as the hearth of kitchen fire. Gay. C AL BUD forth as a rose growing by the brook of the field. Ecde- siasticus. Budding like the purple May. Lord Thurlcm. BURIED as deep as a funeral urn in a cold sepulchre. Sir W. Scott. BURN as a flame of fire. Sacred Script. like fire. Lidgate, Wyatt, 8f others. like flaming fire. Lidgate. More fiercely burning than consuming fire. Sylvester. like a red hot coal of fire. Bickerstaff, 8f Foote. like mines of sulphur. Shake- spear. like Etna's fire. F. Beaumont. Burning like blazing Etna. G. Powell. Burn clear and constant like the source of day. J. Brown, in Dodsley's Collection. BURST like lightning from a cloud. R. Southey. like lightning from an angry cloud. Play, The Revolution. Impatiently they wait to burst from their confinement, like imprisoned winds that storm indignant through their hollow caves, and labour for a vent. R. Barford. Burst like a hand grenade. Macnally. Bursting like the sun from ocean's lap. W. Hawkins. BUSY as a bee. Chaucer, Sidney, fy others. as the industrious bee. Poolers Parnassus. BUXOM as the day. R. Bloomfield. BUZZ about like flies. Dryden. C. CACKLE like a hen. Goner. CALM as peace. Motteux, Blackmore, fy others. as ease. T. Cooke. as contentment. Charles Fox. as peaceful seas that know no storms. N. Rorve. as the flood where the peace- loving halcyon deposits her brood. /. G. Cooper. as the ocean whilst the halcyon brood get vital warmth upon the gentle flood. Play, Timoleon. as when the halcyon builds her quiet nest. Dryden. as the tranquil ocean when on the unruffled surface halcyons breed. Eliza Haynood. as sleep. Marston, $ GAL Masslnger. as summer seas. Charlotte Charke. Breast, calm as summer's sea when waves forget to roll. John Clare. as seas when the winds sleep. Play, Fatal Union. as the sleep- ing seas. Gay. as the still waters when scarce a breath of wind curls the falling waves. Pix. Calm and unruffled as a summer sea, when not a breath of wind flies o'er its surface. Addison. Serene, calm and unruffled, as the summer sea. F. North. He raves not now ; but like the southern blast, when lightnings cease and all the storm is o'er, grows calm again. Ajax, in Greek Tragic Theatre. like summer seas that smile to heaven unruffled by a breeze. P. Pindar. Calm as ocean's stream when Amphitrite smiles. George Graham. as runs the untroubled flood. S. Boyse. Glide calm as a gen- tle brook's unruffled tide. Hughes. as the breast of the lake when the loud wind is laid. Ossian. as a standing lake. G. G. Douvilly. as infants when they sleep. C. Davenant. Calmly as infants sleep. N. Tate. Calm as the slumbering infant. Emily, in Poetical Calendar. as infants at the mother's breast. T. Y olden, in Dryden's Miscellany. as a rocked in- fant. N. Lee. as innocence. Byron. as sleeping innocence. C. Johnson. as innocence in sleep. J.Montgomery. as virtue. ShaJcespear. as forgiven saints at their last hour. Sir W, Davenant. Calmer than in their sleeps forgiven hermits are. Ibid. Die as calmly as a saint. Andrew Marvel, in Dry- den's Miscellany. as night. C. Cotton, Watts. as silent night. Thomson. as evening skies. Ibid. as summer even- ings be. Watts. as day's most gentle close. Bernard Barton. as clear evenings after vernal rains. J. Scott of Amrvell. as old Chaos ere his waves began to know a zephyr, or to feel a sun. Camthorn. Calm and gentle as love's soft whis- pers. Sir W. Davenant. Calm as happy lovers. Behn. as the hushed air. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. As Arabian winds. Sir W. Davenant. as the breath which fans the east- ern groves. Dryden. as eastern groves. Pix. Calm and spicy as is Arabia's gentle eastern breeze which fans and opens all the balmy sweets. /. Harris. More calm and gentle than the CH A cool wind that breathes upon the flowers soft kisses in the spring. J. Shirley. as the western winds. Behn. as the cloudless heaven. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as the fields of heaven. Campbell. as death. Broome, C. Johnson. Calm and silent as the shades of death. B. Griffin. as despair. Mirandola. as a discharged culverin. Congreve. Calmly as the wounded patient bears the artist's hand that ministers his cure. Otrvay. Calm is all nature as a resting wheel. Words- north. CAPACIOUS. Flames, capacious as all hell's extent. W. Shirley. CAPRICIOUS as a spoiled child. Cumberland. as the waver- ing wind. M. Robinson. CAREFUL as a guilty conscience. Gibber. CARELESSLY. Move carelessly as seamen walk a deck. Sir W. Davenant. as hurls the moth her wing against the light wherein she dies. Byron. CARNATIONED like a sleeping infant's cheek. Byron. CATCHING as the plague. Dekker. as drowzy yawning. E. Ward. CAUTIOUS as age. Play, Duke of Guise. G.Servell. CHANGE like the wind. Play, London Prodigal. Sir W. Dave- nant, 8f others. as western wind. Harington. as a weather- cock. Sir P. Sidney. A. Fraunce in England's Parnassus. as the moon. Lidgate, Shakespear, fy others. as a March day. Sir W. Scott. Like April days his passions change. James Ralph. Proteus-like you change your shape. Dryden. Change as the shadow. A. Hill. like a dream. Sir W. Scott. CHANGEABLE as the wind. Centlivre, Dryden, fy otJiers. as an April day. John Baillie. An April day is less changeable than her humour. E. Moore. More changeable than Proteus. E. Irving. Not more changeable the dye quick shifting on the ring-dove's neck sidelong against the sun. Play, Palladius $ Irene. CH A CHANGEFUL as the wind. A. S. Cottles Icelandic Poetry. as air. Mrs. Brooke. as the moon. Spenser. as a child at play. Pope. as the r pictures fashioned from clouds whose variegated borders o'erspread the vault of evening. Hodson. CERTAIN as fate. Old Plays, Spanish Gipsey, Herod $ Anti- pater, fy others. as the unchanged edicts of Fate. Poolers Par- nassus. as the stroke of death. Ibid. as cold engendereth hail. Chaucer. CHAFE like a stag in the toil. Beaumont fy Fletcher.- -like a lion in the toils betrayed. Smollett. CHARILY. Preserve more charily than eyesight, health, or thy senses. Play, Second Maiden's Tragedy. CHARMING as a cherubin. Durfey. as the Houris. S. Rous- seau's Flowers of Persian Literature. as Nature's face in the new spring. Sedley. More charming than May. Poem, The Theriad. Charming as winter's shine, or summer's shade. Drydens Miscellany. Eyes, charming as the sun's brightest rays in summer skies. Fielding. Charming as sunshine to the bee. Pope. as the bubbling fountain to the thirsty swain. Ibid. Voice, charming as a syren's. T. Hurlstone. Charming as Venus rising from the sea. Play, Female Wits. CHASE away as a vision of the night. Sacred Script., Sylvester. chased as the chaff of the mountains before the wind. Sacred Script. CHASTE as truth. G. E. Howard. as Diana. Greene, Shake- spear, 8f others. as Diana's thoughts. Play, Soliman and Per- scda. as the virgin huntress of the woods. C. Johnson. as Vesta. England's Parnassus. as a vestal. Poetical Calendar, J. H. Stevenson. as purest vestals are. Jane Wiseman. No vestal that preserved with quickening oil the sacred flame, was in her chastity more cold, more timorous than she. Sir W. Davenant. Chaste and holy as the vestal rites. Centlivre. I have loved you with a flame chaste as vestal fire. N. Tate. Chaste as a virgin. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Chaste by virtue, CH A as is the new-born virgin. Play, Queen. Chaste as when she was new born. Garrick. like infants. Mrs. S. Gunning. as unborn infants. Play, Hector of Germany. as babes new born. R. Bourne. As chaste from any sinful act, as when we were first mantled after birth. /. Shirley. Chaste as the first voice of a new-born infant. Marston. as infant dreams. C. Johnson. as the untainted thoughts of infancy. Southern. as a nun. E. Ward. as the veiled nun. Bp. Hall. as a reli- gious nun. D. Craufurd. Chaste and religious as the virgin nun. G. G. Douvilly. as the nun's first vow. Poole's Par- nassus. as the vows of nuns, or anchorite's prayer. Ibid. as cloistered saints. Mrs. Cowley. Chaste in my thoughts as un- spotted virginity itself. R. Head. as angels are. Belm. as the purest angel of the sky. R. Dodsley. as Eve, ere she blushed. Theophila. as Penelope. Barclay, Marlowe. asLu- cretia. Gay. as the first Lucretia was. Fielding. as Camilla. E. Smith. Chaste like bashful cold Eurydice. Sir W. Da- renant. as Salmacis amidst the streams. Marmion. as Jove's wise child. Moses Mendez. as the moon. T. Heyn'ood. as the white moon. Marlowe. as the silver white beams of the moon. J. G. Cooper. More chaste and fair than is the queen of shades. Play, Edward the Third. than the queen of night. Swift. Chaste as Cynthia. M. Pilkington. as Cynthia's beams. Poetical Miscellany. as Cynthia's breast. Dekker. as cold Cynthia's virgin light. Pope, Sheffield Duke of Buckingham. as light. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Pomfret. as the virgin light. J. Banks. as the light of heaven. The Robbers, a Play from Schiller. as the new-born day. Centlivre. as the morn. Beaumont Fletcher. as the blushes of the dewy morn. C. Goring. as the bashful morn. Poole's Parnassus. Chaster than is the morning's modesty that rises with a blush, over whose bosom the western wind creeps softly. R. Davenport. Chaste as the air. Poole's Parnassus. as the breath of heaven, or morning's womb that brings the day forth. Middleton, fy Rowley. as the dew-drop. G. Walker. as morning dew. E. Young. Early, bright, transient, chaste, as morning dew, she CH A sparkled, was exhaled, and went to heaven. Ibid. as the sweet morning dew that loads the heads of drooping flowers. Randolph. as the morning pearls dropt in the lily's spotless bosom. W. Chaniberlaine. as the unblown bud. Pooles Par- nassus. as is the bud ere it be blown. Shakespear. as is the rose ere it be blown. Miller. as flowers in bud. C. Johnson. as buds of roses ere the winds have kissed them. Centlivre. The unblown rose, the mines of crystal, nor the diamond, are half so chaste, so pure, so innocent. Play, Herod and Anti- pater. as the maiden blossoms of a rose. Pooles Parnassus. Chaste and unsullied as firsi, opening lilies, or untouched buds. Suckling. as untouched lilies. Dryden's Miscellany. as the unsullied lily. J. Corye. as virgin lilies in their infancy. Rawlins. The lily opening to the heaven's soft dews was not so fragrant, and was not so chaste. H. More. Chaster than lilies clad in summer fragrance. W. Thompson. Chaste as is Apollo's tree. /. Lilly. as that plant which scarce suffers to be touched. C. Turner. Chaste and free as spring. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Chaster than the virgin spring, ere her blossoms she doth bring. Recreation for ingenious Headpieces. Chaste as winter. Habington. as winter's night. N. Lee. as ice. Shakespear, Beaumont fy Fletcher, fy others. as the icicle that's curdled by the frost from purest snow, and hangs on Dian's temple. Shakespear. as icicles. Play, The Spaniards. More clearly chaste than ice or frozen rain. Marston. Chaste as unsunned snow. Shakespear, Durfey, fy others. as the con- secrated snow that lies in Dian's lap. Shakespear. as mountain snows. Dodsley's Collection. Chaste and pure as purest snow. Spenser. Chaster and purer than the virgin snow. Banks. Chaste as the fanned snow twice bolted o'er by the bleak northern blasts. N. Lee. as trembling snow, whose fleeces clothe the Alpine hills. J. Shirley. as the white down of heaven, whose feathers play upon the wings of a cold winter's gale, trembling with fear to touch the impurer earth. Ibid. as falling snows. Mrs. Brooke, T. Cooke. as spirits' joys. Dryden. as maids' sighs. Gildon. as holy love. Mrs. S. CHE Gunning. as sisters' love, when coldly they return a brother's kiss. Gildon. Chastely as the morning dews kiss flowers. Randolph. Chaste as turtle doves. C. Cotton. as the eyes of turtles. Poole's Parnassus. as the phoenix. Durfey, R. Wil- kinson. as the Arabian bird that wants a sex to woo. Sir W. Davenant. as the emerald. Pix. as the hardened rock. Poole's Parnassus. as crystal. J. Shirley. chaster than cry- stal on the Scythian cliffs. C. Johnson. Chaster than cold camphire. Beaumont fy Fletcher. CHATTER like a crane. Sacred Script. like a swallow. Ibid. like a pye. Johnson. a jay. Fawkes. a parrot. C. Shan. a magpie. Burgoyne, J. Baillie. an ape. Play, Prodigal, or Marriage a la mode. CHEAP as lies. Shakespear. as dust. Chapman. as a cracked china cup. Fielding. as a last year's almanac. G. Soane. CHEER like the first dawn of light. C. Johnson. like the sun. Play, Edward the Third. Cheering as the solar beam. Dods- ley's Collection. More cheering than the sunny ray. M. Pil- kington. than breath of infant spring. Ibid. like the re- freshing breezes of the spring. A. Bicknell. Cheering as earth's soft verdure to the eye. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. CHEERFUL as the day. W. Corvper, J. G. Cooper, $ others. as the morn. J. Shirley. as the lively morn. /. Armstrong. as the morning's light. Sir W. Davenant. as dawning light. Hughes, as a May day morning. Gibber. as the sun -beams after night. Play, The Apostate. as a sunny May morning. Play, Right and Wrong. as the rising sun in May. Words- worth. More cheerful than a vernal morn. Savage. Cheerful and serene as when first morning smiles upon the world. Milton. as the birds that welcome in the day. Behn. as the birds that wake the morn. Dryden. Cheerfully as birds salute the morn after a cold, long, stormy, winter night. Southern. Cheerful like clear Aurora, when she doth appear in brightest robes to make a glorious day. Tethys 1 Festival. Tn the gay CHE spring of life, when every note was as the mounting lark's, merry and cheerful to salute the morn. Southern. Cheerfully as the soaring lark wakes the gay morn. Settle. More cheerful than the lambs that frisk the green. Ward's Gentle Shepherd. Her smiles were cheerful as enlivening May. M. Leapor. as the spring. Play, Fatal Discovery. as April suns. Play, Ro- mulus $ Hersilia. as summer's noon. N. Lee. as the linnet's lays. M. Bruce. as children climb the breasts of mothers. Byron. as victors warm in their success. Sir W. Davenant. CHERISH her like life. J. Dennis. CHILL and surly as the northern blast. T. Morton. CHOLERIC as a cook by a fire-side. Dryden. CHURLISH as the seas. Herrick. as a bear. Shakespear. *s a hog. Jonson. CIRCULAR as heaven. Dryden 's Miscellany. CIRCUMSPECT as Cynthia. Chapman. CLAMOROUS as aparrot against rain. Shakespear. as nestling birds. J. Montgomery. CLAMMY and damp as earth. Otrvay. like the damps of mid- night sepulchres. W. Thompson. CLASP like ivy. Donne. As the youthful ivy clasps an aged elm. Parnell. CLEAN as any pearl. Play, Jacob and Esau. as a penny. Gay. CLEAR as the sun. Sacred Script., Sir P. Sydney, fy others. as was the sun's new face in his first sphere. Sir W. Davenant. as summer suns. W. Thompson. Clear and spotless as the brightest sunshine. G. S. Green. as day. Shakespear, Chap- man, fy others. I will make it as clear to you as the sun in his meridian. T. Dibdin. Truth, clear as even the mid-day sun. Play, School for Ingratitude. as the noon sun. Play, Mercurius Britannicus. as the sun at noon-day. Tillotson, Centlivre. Clearly as the sun shines at noon-day. Tillotson. Clear and unsullied as the noon-day sun. Can't horn. as the CLE noon-day sun. Miscellany of Poems by J. Husbands, J. Baillie. as the sun at noon. Poetical Calendar, J. H. Stevenson. as the noon day. R. Baron, Atterbury, fy others. as the bright noon-tide heavens. Milman. as mid day. Donne. as light. Jonson, Middleton, fy others. Clear and pure as heaven's light. Duchess of Newcastle. Clear and open as the summer's light. C. Philips. as day light. A. Murphy, Cumberland, $ others. as unpolluted light. R. Barford. as Aurora, when she doth appear in brightest robes to make a glorious day. S. Daniel. Look clear and fresh as the morning. Jonson. as noon-day light. G. E. Howard. as the noon-tide light. Earl of Carlisle. as moon light. Chaucer. as the sky. Spenser, Wordsworth. Clear without spot as summer's cloudless sky. W. Mclmoth. Clear as the skies when their blue depths are cloudless. J. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. Clear and open as a shadeless sky. London. as heaven. J. Shirley. as open- ing heaven. J. Harris. as the crystal heaven. Ibid. as heaven's unclouded brow. Henry Faughan. as the cloudless heavens. John Bowring. as air. Recreationfor ingenious Head- pieces. as summer evenings. Duchess of Newcastle, as stars. Donne. My thoughts are clearer than unclouded stars. Dryden. Seen as clear as is the pole star, when no envious cloud ob- structs its view. Play, Codrus. as great Delia's horned bow. Play, The True Trojans. Clear (guiltless) as is the babe new born. Armin. Clear as the child to be born, of this which he accuseth me. R. Bernard. as innocence. Beaumont Fletcher, Play, Valiant Scot, fy others. Clearer than the inno- cence of infants. Play, Game of Chess. Clear as harmless innocence. C. Turner. as chastity. Ibid. as justice. Savage. as truth. Play, Don John. She looks as clear as morning roses newly washed with dew. Shakespear. Clear as rain- drops ere they touch the earth. M. G. Lewis. as glass. Ha- rington, H. Vaughan, $ others. as shining glass. W. Thomp- son. as crystal glass. Spenser, J. Day. Clear and transpa- rent as the purest glass. Chapman. as a mirror. Grainger. as crystal. Sacred Scr'qrt., Barclay, Sf others. as crystal CLI stone. Spenser. as rock crystal. Arabian Nights Entertain- ment. Clearer than crystal rock. Lilly. than the pure cry- stal. John Hanrvay. Clear as fair crystal. Conley. as spot- less crystal. /. Wilson. Clear and transparent as crystal. Arabian Nights Entertainment. as springs. N. Field. as limpid springs. Collins. Clearer than mountain springs. C. Philips. Clear as a brook. Sir W. Jones, as gravel brook. Play, King John. as a brook, whose crystal lips salute only the freshest meadows. Glapthorne. Run clear and smooth as crystal brooks. Duchess of Newcastle. as founts in July. Shakespear. Clearer than Diana's fount. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Clear as sacred fountains. M. Pilkington. Clearer than ice, or running streams that stray through garden plots. Dryden. than the limpid stream. J. Hervey. Clear as a crystal stream. W. Earle. The purest spring is not so free from mud as I am clear from treason to my sovereign. Shakespear. as a trout stream. S. Foote. as the diamond spark. Sir W. Scott. as any beryl. Lidgate. More clear than fair orient pearl, fetched from the farthest Inde. D. Belchier. Clear as amber. Churchill. as air. F. Beaumont. as a carter's eye. Play, the Puritan. Voice clear as that of angels. Dekker. Sing as skylark clear. L. Macnally. Brow, clear as ivory. J. Aikin. CLING like ivy. Play, Apparition. like ivy to the oak. Jonson. CLOSE as your own thoughts. T. Heynood. as beggary to a prodigal. J. Kirk. as the skin to the flesh, or as the flesh to the bone. Ranlins. as a confessor. Congreve. as the Ma- cedonian phalanx. Swift. as oak. Shakespear, Murphy, fy others. as an uncracked nut. Play, All Vorvs kept. as a cockle. Jonson, Beaumont fy Fletcher, 8$ others. as shells of cockles meet. Jonson. as a cockle shell. Durfey. Stick as close together as the two shells of an oyster. L. Macnally. Lock them fast, close, and silent, as the jaws of death. Southern. The secret is kept as close as night. Murphy. Keep as close to him as shadow to substance. Sir W. Scott. Lie as close as a man in a proclamation. Southern. Lie close COL as sleeping serpents. Sir F. Fane. This vanity sticks close, like ivy to the noblest plants. Ibid. Close as a vice. P. Pindar. as a supple courtier to a king. Ibid. as an old miser's coffers. Play, Unfortunate Usurper. as Arethusa hides her streams. J. Smith. CLOUDED like dark night. Duchess of Newcastle. COILED like a boa in the wood. Byron. COLD as winter. Drayton, Banks, fy others. as winter blasts. Banks. as the breath of winter. Poole's Parnassus. as winter's chilly day-break. R. Shiel. as winter nights. Behn. ^ Colder than the wintry starry nights. A. Hill. Cold as winter's snow. Rarvlins. as winter snows. Carerv, Pope. as nipping wintry frost. C. Marsh. Cold and charitiless as winter frosts. Pix. as the hairs of winter. /. Shirley. as December. H. H. Milman. as a December's night. G. Soane as ice. Tur- bervile, Harington, fy others. Cold as mountain ice, which the north winds congeal to purest crystal. Poole's Parnassus. Colder than an icicle. /. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. Cold as northern icicles. Durfey. as the icicles of severest winter. Gildon. as frozen drop of wintry dew. Sir W. Scott. as the icicle on carved stone. Landon. Cold and heavy as a rock of ice. N. Field. Cold as any frost. Chaucer. as a northern congelation. G. G. Doumlly. as snow. Beaumont 8f Fletcher, Suckling, 8f others. as a snow-ball. Play, Pericles Prince of Tyre. Lillo. as falling snow. Drydcn. As the blast from Boreal snow. Thomson. Colder than the mountain's snow. Crown, Centlivre. than snow on Scythian mountains. Beaumont fy Fletcher. than Thracian snows. E. Young. than Friezeland snow. A. Breiver. Cold and chaste as northern snow. Sir W^ Davenant. Cold and unsullied as the mountain snow. Madan. Cold as the bleak northern winds upon the face of winter. Play, Merry Devil of Edmonton. as glaciated snow on the bleak Euxine promontory. Douvilly. as the snowy Alps. N. Richards. as Alpine snow. G. Sandys, G. Powell, fy others. Cold as the white head of the Appenine. COL Play, Muleasses the Turk. Cold as the proud tops of those aspiring hills, whose heads are wrapt in everlasting snow, though the hot sun roll o'er them every day. Play, Valentinian. as snow on tallest hills. Mrs. Manley. as snow or hail dissolved. Chapman. as an ice-house. T. Morton. as the North. Glapt home, Powell. as northern blasts. Prior. Colder of comfort than the frozen north is. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as the regions of the frozen north. /. Oldmixon. as the frozen zone. Pooles Parnassus. as old Saturn. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as the Northern star. Vanbrugh. as the middle region of the air. Marmion. as the wave of Hebrus' wintry breast. Langhorne. as Stygian water. Chapman. as the frozen stream. Banks. Cold and chaste as is the Northern ocean, when winter locks its frozen bosom up, against the ma- riner's invading oar. James Miller. Cold was her brow, and pallid was her cheek as ocean's foam. James Bird. as the dew the stone distils. Glapthorne. as the falling dews. A. Seward. as death. Plays, Landgartha, Mother Shipton. E. Young, fy others. as the hand of death. Dryden. as the bed of death. Otmay. as the dew of death. N. Lee. Colder than the grave. Ibid. Cold as charity. Quarles, L. Echard. Appear as cold as great ones when Merit begs. Otmay. as age. Settle, Duke of Guise. as a frown. Poem, Paradise of Coquettes. as the Thracian shepherdess that tends her harmless flocks on the bleak mountain's top covered with snow, that feeds on roots and herbs, and drinks the icy brook. R. Hurst. as the chastest vestal. Ibid. Colder than fountains. C. Lennox. Cold as a well. Chaucer. as a stone. Chaucer, Lidgate, fy others. as the feet of rocks. Sir W. Davenant as marble. Tatham, Gildon, and others. Than marble more cold and more pale. The Minstrel, a poem. Cold and white as marble. Cornwall, 8f others. as marble tombs. Mrs. Manley. as any marble stone. Turbervile, H. Carey. as a marble monument. Settle. Cold and hard as a marble pillar. Harington.ns crystal. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Poetical Miscellany. Cold and hardened as the virgin crystal. Beaumont $ Fletcher. as COM clay. Play, How to choose a good Wife. N. Cotton, 8f others. as earth. T. Bayly, T. Porter, $ others. as the earth he lies on, and as dull too. Play, Fatal Union. as lead. Alex. Bar- clay, T. Heyivood, $ others. as an asp. Hoole's Ariosto. Colder than salamanders. Donne. Than a mountain Musco- vite more cold. Sir W. Davenant. Colder to me than adamant to fire. Otnay. Cold as a cucumber. Beaumont Fletcher, L. Sharp, fy others. as a fish. Sir W. Davenant. as Aquarius. W. Rowley. as the virgin moon. Colman Jun. COMELY as rising day. Otnay. Comelier than the silver clouds that dance on zephyrs' wings before the King of heaven. G. Peele. as the well spread cedar. R. Davenport. as the dewy rose. Pitt, Oxford Sausage. COMFORTABLE as rest to weary men. Barclay. COMFORTING as breaking light. Sir W. Davenant. COMFORTLESS as frozen water to a starved snake. Shake- spear. COMMAND like law. Donne. Commanding as the breath of kings. N. Rome. Speak as commanding as a constable at midnight. R. Taylor. COMMISERATE as pitying angels. Jane Wiseman. COMMON as the air. Chapman, Lansdomne, fy others. as vital air. J. Cronne. as the air which we breathe. Play, Unfor- tunate Usurper. as the light. Cronne, Dryden. as light or air. G. Sandys. as the light or air in which we breathe and live. Watts. as the day. T. Goff. as sickness. J. Webster. as for a man who feels pain to fancy that he could bear it better in any other part. Dr. Johnson. as the street. John Goner. as a cart-way. Pierce Plowman's Vision. as the way between St. Albans and London. Shakespear. as the stairs that mount the Capitol. Shakespear, Durfey. as Westmin- ster-hall. PasquiVs Nightcap. as dirt. Fielding. as the dust. Ibid. as the tainted shambles, or the dust we tread. Dryden as bees in Hybla. Lilly. as hares in Atho. Ibid. D CON as fowls in the air. Ibid. as fishes. F. Boothby. as the winds. Sir W, Davenant. as the sand. Sylvester. as glasses in taverns. H. Shirley. as any tavern door. Play, The Fleir. as a barber's glass. Suckling. CONCENTRATE like rays into one focus. Byron. CONFIDENT as justice. Beaumont $ Fletcher. as Jove. Jonson. as Hercules. Marston. as the falcon's flight against a bird. Shakespear. as day. Duchess of Newcastle. CONFORMABLE as the melting wax to the impressed seal. J. Hervey. CONFUSION worse than Babel. J. H. Stevenson. CONSPICUOUS as the brightness of a star. W. Cowper. More conspicuous even than the sun in clearest majesty. B. Barnes. as the sun at noon day. O. S. Wandesford. as substance. Shakespear. More conspicuous than pyramids. Dr. Johnson. CONSTANT as the sun. N. Field. as the sun that keeps its course, though storms and tempests vex the nether sky, and lowering clouds awhile obscure his brightness. Lillo. as the day. Watts, fy others. as light. Mrs. Brooke. as the morn. G. Fitzgerald. as the heavens. Tillotson. as the northern star. Durfey. as the northern star, of whose true, fixed, and resting quality, there is no fellow in the firmament. Shake- spear. as the stars that never move. Otway. as the stars that never vary. Mirandola. as the centre. Chapman, J. Day. as the needle to the adamant. Dekker. as. the needle to the pole. Henry Siddons. The needle is not more constant to the north. J. Shirley, Pilon. as the returning sun, the fixed stars, or the needle to its pole. Play, Fickle Shepherdess. as tides. E. Young. as gliding waters roll, whose swelling tides obey the moon. B. Booth. as the dove. Poetical Calendar, The Dupe, 8f others. as a turtle. A. Portal. as the turtle-dove. Durfey. as pining turtles. N. Lee. as the turtle to its mate. Banks, 8f others. Constant and true as the widowed dove. Sir W. Scott. as Penelope. Devices of sundry Gentlemen, Play, Wily cou beguiled, fy others. as Penelope to her mate. Gascoigne. as Lucretia. J. Day. as courage to the brave. N. Lee. as the diamond's standing light. Tate. Constant as Jove the night and day bestows. Pope. as the wheels of time. W. Conper. More constant than miser to his gold. Pcaps. as truth. Gildon. as dying martyrs. C. Johnson. as holy faith. /. B. Surges. CONTAGIOUS. More contagious than the plague. Lidgate. CONTEND together, like gales of spring, as they fly along the hill, and bend by turns the feebly whistling grass. Ossian. CONTENT as saints in visions. C. Philips. CONTRARY as light to darkness. South, Tillotson. as white is to black. Chapman. as black to white. C. Butler. Con- trary and opposite as yea and nay, as black and purest white. Quarles. as sloth is to virtuous business. Lidgate. CONVINCING as any demonstration in the mathematics. South. COOL as Christmas. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as virgin snow. Henry Vaughan. as the blast that checks the budding spring. Farmer's Boy. as breath of vernal air from snowy Alp. Milton. as the grot of Thetis, hid beneath the vaulted ocean. Glover. as morning dew. J. Smith. Cool and translucent as the gushing rill. Preston's App. Rhodius. as night. A. Marvel, Cawthorn. as patience. Otrvay. as charity. Play, Neglected Virtue. as age. Cawthorn. as a sage's morning contempla- tion. W. Thompson. as a cucumber. Gay, Macnally. COPIOUS as bounty. Savage. Copious and rich as Pactolus. Young Hypocrite, in Foote's Comic Theatre. CORAL as Aurora's cheek. Play, Costly Whore. COUCH like spaniels. Dryden. as a lion. Sacred Script. Couching as a rated hound. Sir W. Scott. COVETOUS as Demas. South. COUNTLESS as the rays of light. Savage. as sun-beams. D 2 cou Montgomery. as the sand. Parnell. as the sea-side sands. W. Cowper. as the sea-beat sand. A. Cherry. COURAGEOUS as Hercules. Play, Love 4-la-mode. COURTEOUS as a friend. W. Cowper. as monarch the morn he is crowned. Sir W. Scott. COY as a maid. Chaucer. as Daphne. /. Smith. More coy than a wanton kid. Fraunce. as the plant that shrinks at the approach of man. Pooles Parnassus. CRAFTY as a fox. Corye. CRAGGY as the Alps. Play, Valiant Welshman. CRANK as a peacock. Medrvall. CRAWL like snails. E. Ward. CREEP like shadows by him. Shakespear. Creep close as snake in hidden weeds. Spenser. like a boy after a butterfly. Duffet. like a snail. Two Harlequins, a Farce. CRIMSON as the morning sky. Landon. as a sunset hour. Ibid. CROAK like a raven. Shakespear, Dekker. CROOKED as the crescent. Sheridan. as a chestnut bough. Sir W. Davenant. CROUCH like a cur. Duchess of Newcastle. like a cur taken worrying sheep. Beaumont fy Fletcher. like chastened hound. Sir W. Scott. like a whelp awed by the heaving of his master's hand. Rawlins. CROUDING like the waves of ocean. Byron. Crouding thick as flowers that play in summer winds. Moore. CROW like chanticleer. Shakespear. CRUEL as death. Chapman, Broome, fy others. as the grave. Sacred Script., South, 8$ others. as the ocean when it raves. Fanshaw. More cruel than the main. Lansdowne. More cruel than a winter storm. Oldmixon. Cruel as the winds in March. Sir W. Davenant. as Caligula. Fielding. as Pro- crustes. E. Smith. as a tiger. Sir P. Sidney, $ others. as BAR a tiger or bear. Play, Gentleman Cit, in Footers Theatre. More cruel than leopards, lions, tigers, wolves. Otway. Cruel as tigers o'er their trembling prey. Ibid. More cruel than the tiger o'er his spoil. Dryden. than wild tigers. Duchess of Newcastle. than bears. G. Sandys. More cruel than even- ing beasts that creep from savage den. Play, Youth's Comedy. than Scylla, or the syrens. Gildon. CUNNING as serpents. Farquhar. as a witch. Play, The Ball. as a travelled spy. Sir W. Davenant. as a monkey. T. Ward. as foxes. E. Ward, T. King. CURRENT as the air. Randolph, H. Dell. CURVED like the crescent moon. Southey. CUT down like poppies by the reaper's hand. Lansdonme. D. DANCE like a kid. Sir W. Davenant. like the ocean spray. Landon. DANGEROUS as infection. /. Ford. More dangerous than shoals and rocks. A. Hill. Dangerous as baits to fish. Shake- spear. More dangerous than rocks or seas. Dennis. DARE like a foolish fly, whose vexing wings urge the slow flame to burn her as she sings. N. Lee. Yet like a rock, both sea and winds I'll dare. Ibid. Daring as despair. Seivell. DARK as hell. Studley, Spenser, fy others. Dark and obscure as hell. Randolph. Dark and profound as hell. Lillo. Darker than Acheron. Poole's Parnassus. Dark as Erebus. Shake- spear. as despair. Settle. as ignorance. Shakespear, Savage. as night. Lidgate, Shakespear, 8$ others. as gloomy night. Sir T. Moore. as the sullen night. Poole's Parnassus. as ebon night. W. Churchey. as the womb of night. /. Shirley. as midnight. Habington, A. Hill, < others as a December D AR midnight. D. Terry. as meridian night. Darwin's Botanic Garden. Darker than pitchy sable night. T. Hey wood. Dark as the Egyptian night. Pooles Parnassus. Darker than black- ness. Donne. Dark as if the funeral of light were celebrated there. Sir W. Davenant. as the grave. A. Corvley. Play, The Rape, fy others. Dark and silent as the grave. /. Corye. Dark and gloomy as the grave, N. Rome. Dark as the dark- ness of the grave. Sir W. Scott. as the hushed silence of the grave. Otway. Dark as the night that veils the tomb. J. Bird. as death. Cumberland. Dark and drear as death. Play, Fair Circassian. as the mansions of the dead. Psalms, by Brady 8f Tale. as the drowzy mansion-house of sleep. Poole's Parnassus. as a wolf's mouth. Sir W. Scott. as a dungeon. Jonson. as a dungeon in which no beam of comfort enters. Massinger. as winter. Campbell. as a cloud. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. as a thunder cloud. Montgomery, London, Sf others. as the vapours gathering storms compose. Trans- lation of Voltaire's Henriade. Darken like clouds, whose shadows o'er the landscape sail. Montgomery. Dark like the sun, when he carries a cloud on his face. Ossian. as the troubled face of the moon, when it foretells the storms. Ibid. as the evening storm. M. R. Mitford. as gathering tem- pests, wrapt in midnight gloom. Boyd. Dark and gloomy as the ocean on a cloudy day. Virgin of the Sun, Play from Kotzebue. Dark and troubled as Cretan seas, when vexed by warring winds. Smith. Dark as a raven. Colman. as the raven's wing. Ossian. as the raven's plumage. Sir W. Scott. as Ethiops. E. Young. as an oven. Fraunce. as any coal. Garth. as pitch. Chaucer, Sidney, fy others. as jet. Dryderfs Miscellany. Dark and cold as a Greenland midnight. /. O'Kee/e. DARKNESS thick as ill met clouds can make. Sir W. Davenant. DART like light. B. Martyn. like lightning. C. Johnson, So- mervile. like the bolt of Jove. Countess of Winchilsea. like lightning from a summer's cloud. Sir W. Scott. like a shoot- DE A ing star. Byron. like a sun-beam. James Ralph, Manley, fy others. Meteor-like, the gleam darts through the void. G. Keate. Darting as Apollo's beams. Duchess of Newcastle. Dart like the deer before the hounds. Sir W. Scott. like the dolphin from the shark. Ibid. Dart down as swift as a hawk upon a partridge. C. Burnaby. DASH like waves against the shore. Watts. Dash down like an Alpine cataract of snow. Montgomery. Dashed on like a spurred blood-horse in a race. Byron. DAUNTLESS as death. Prior. as the strong pounced bird of Jove. Grainger. DAZZLE like the sun. Play, Edward the Third. H. Killigren, fy others. like a cloudless sun. Pope. like the sun in his me- ridian. Shadwell. Thus, like the sun encircled with his beams, he dazzles with excess of light. Ravenscroft. More dazzling to behold than orient suns, that dawn in ruddy gold. Preston's App. Rhodius. Dazzling as the light. Pope, Cawthorn. Daz- zling like the break of morn. J. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. Dazzling as a bright dagger suddenly unsheathed. Specimens of Hindoo Literature, by N. E. Kindersley. DEAD as earth. Shakespear. as clay. Otway. as a stone. Chaucer, others. as a door-nail. Shakespear, T. Shadwell, 4' others. as a herring. Play, Landgartha. Nabbs, Sf others. as a stock-fish. Otway. as a monument. Sir W. Davenant. Play, Merry Milk-maids of Islington. DEADLY as the sting of satire. Cawthorn. as the baleful flood of Acheron or Styx. Doyne's Tasso. Poison, more deadly than a mad dog's tooth. Shakespear. Deadly as the basilisk. R. Greene. as the eye of basilisk. John Gait. DEAF as death. Duchess of Newcastle, N. Lee, 8f others. Deaf i. to intercession as the ear of death. E. Irving. as the dead. N. Lee, S. Foote. as the sea, Shakespear, Fraunce, fy others. as the stormy sea. Tate. as the remorseless sea. Corye. More deaf to prayers than winds and seas. Milton. Deaf as winds DBA and seas are to the sailor's prayers. Wandesford. Deaf to my prayers, as seas and winds to sinking mariners, Dryden. Deaf as the storm to sinking virtue's groan. Brown. as a stone. Turbervile, Stevenson. as rocks. Turbervile, J. Shirley, 8f others. Deaf as rocks unto the billowing surges of the sea. Play, Bastard. Deaf as the wind, and as the rocks unshaken. Otrvay. as the rocks, or winds, or raging seas. Gildon. as seas and rocks. Bedloe. as a storm. C. Davenant, Lans- downe, $ others. Deaf and inexorable as a storm. Bevil Higgons. as winds. N. Lee. Play, Different Widows, <^ others. as a northern wind. Play, Ungrateful Favourite. T. May. as the billows. Dryden. as adders, winds, or the remorse- less seas. Banks. as adders. Beaumont ^Fletcher, Shakespear, Sf others. as adders, and as deadly. N. Lee. Deaf and more fierce than the adder is. Play, Faithful Shepherd. Deaf and inexorable as adders sung to. Sir F. Fane. Deaf as the adder, when with grounded head and circled form, her avenues of sound barred safely, one slant eye watches the charmer's lips waste on the wind his baffled witchery. Southey. More deaf than trees. Waller. Deaf as the flint. Ogilvie. More deaf to mercy than the famished wolf that tears the bleating kid. Smollett. Deaf as a post. Colman. DEAR as his soul's redemption. Shakespear. Dearer than my soul. Shakespear, Machin, fy others. Dear as my soul's bliss. T. Killigrew. as heaven. Play, Arden of Feversham. Poem, South Downs. as life. G. Whetstones, Beaumont $ Fletcher, fy others. as air. Marston. Dearer than air or eye-sight. M. G. Lewis. than the vital air I breathe. Dryden, Hoole f s Ariosto. Dear as the vital warmth that feeds my life. Otway. Dearer than life to one who fears to die. N. Lee. than my breath. Beaumont $ Fletcher, T. Gibber. than life's best joys. A. Hill. Dearly prized as life. Jonson. More dear, more precious to my heart than the warm blood which feeds its vital motion. R. Dodsley. Dear as the drops that warm my heart. H. More. as the ruddy drops that warm my heart. Gray, in Dodsley's Collection. Dear beyond the crimson tide VU HO'v DE A that warms this heart. Matthew West. as the life blood cir- cling 'round my heart. T. Maurice. as the drops that circled in my veins. A. Murphy. Dearer to my heart than my life's drops. Gildon. Dearer than my blood. Play, The Ghost. Dear to him as life blood to his heart. T. Middleton, H. Boyd. Dear as mine own heart. Cockain. Dearer than the blood that bathes my heart. Hook's Ariosto. Dear as my heart's purple drops. Play, Zenobia. Dearer than the apple of mine eye. Marlowe, Sylvester. Dear as my own eyes. Glap- thorne. T. Killigren, fy others. as light. Play, Alarbas. Dear to me as light and life. Burns. Dearer to me v than light, or life. Henry Siddons. Dear to my heart as the light to my eye. Burns. as the light that shines before my eyes. Hoole's Ariosto. Dear to these eyes as is the new-born light of hea- ven, Hartson. Dearer to my eyes than light. Sit W. Dave- nant. Dearer to my sight than the gay fires that gild the gloom of night. Shepherd's Lottery. Dearer to me than light. A. Hill, Lillo, 8[ others. Dearer to my soul than light. Fielding* Dear as the light that shows the lurking rock. James Thomson. Dear as to dungeon slaves the solar gleam. Maurice's Elegiac Poem on Sir W. Jones. as the light to eyes but just restored and healed of blindness. Otway. Dearer than sight. T. Morton. Dearer than eyesight, space, and liberty. Shakespear. More dear to her than golden beams of light, or vital air. Hoole's Ariosto. Dear as the solar beam. G. R. Dixon. Dearer than day to one whom sight must leave. N. Lee. Loved her dearly as his life. Lidgate. Dearer than life or love. Sheffield Duke of Buckingham. Dear as life to me. Chapman. Dear to me as life and glory. N. Rome. Dearer than life. Gildon, Hayley, &f others. Dearer to my heart than glory. Hayley. Dear as honour to my name. Otway. as honour. P. Pindar. H. Downing. as innocence. Blackmore. Dear as my life, my virtue, or my fame. Centlivre. Dear to my soul as the desire of fame. C. Johnson. Dearer than our fame. J. Shirley. Dearer to me than all the laurelled fame of blood-stained con- querors. W. Preston. Dearer to me than the smiles of kings, DE A my hopes of glory, or immortal fame. Centlivre. than empire. Hayley, Goring. than shouts of triumphs after fight. Goring. Dearer to me than is the sun to earth. Play, Honest Lawyer. Dearer to these eyes than all that heaven e'er gave to charm the sense of man. Centlivre. More dear to me than all the world. Play, Guy Earl of Warwick. Dearer in my eyes than all the world united. Pye. Dearer to my soul than rest to weary pilgrims, or to misers, gold. Otway. Dearer than all the joys vain empire yields, or than to youthful monarchs conquered fields. Dryden. Dear as freedom. Oldmixon. Dear as the raptured thrill of joy. Burns. Dearer to my soul than kindred. Behn. Dear to me as fraternal affinity. C. Macklin. Dear as a parent. Pope. as an only child to a fond parent. Potter's Eschylus. More dear to him than penitent children are to parents. Banks. The exulting angel who shall call to glory the spirits of the just, never prove a visitant more dear to raptured saints awakened from the slumber of the grave, than thou art to thy father. Hayley. Dear as younglings to their dam. Spenser. Dearer than house, or property, or chil- dren. Cumberland. than Plutus' mine. Shakespear. than a diamond's mine. Dr. John Browne. than diamond. Fraunce. than gold. C. Johnson. than relics of departed saints. Cumberland. Dear as the voice of flattery to the proud. P. Pindar. as to hackney coachmen signs of rain. Ibid. Dearer than the spring. Settle. Dear as is the golden honey to the bee. Thurloro. as vernal showers to budding flowers. Burns. As flowers that fade in burning day at evening find the dew- drop dear. Langhorne. Dear as autumn to the farmer. Burns. DEATHLESS as the soul. Bruce. DECAY like the grass of the hill. Ossian. like weeds that wither in the solar ray. Parnell. like stars that melt at the approach of day. Rolle, in Dodslcy's Collection. As flowers when blighted by the eastern gale Shrink from the nipping blast deform'd and pale, Or languid wither in o'erwhelming shade, Thus on her cheek the vernal rose decay'd. Ogilvie. DEL DECEITFUL. More deceitful, tyrannous, and fell, than sy- rens, tempests, and devouring flame. Smollett. Deceitful as the surface of the deep. Merry. DECLINE like sickening flowers, that fade and fall before the blighting wind. London. Decline the head as full-blown pop- pies over-charged with rain. Pope. Drooping as with un- gentle showers the rose o'er-charged with wet declines her head. C. Cotton. As a crimson poppy flower surcharged with his seed and vernal humours falling thick, declines his heavy brow, so his fainting head did bow. Chapman. Our sinking empire now as swift declines as bodies languish by a fierce disease. Goring. DEEP as hell. Jonson, Beaumont fy Fletcher, fy others. as hell profound. E. Young. as lowest hell. Crown. as Erebus. Play, Palladlus fy Irene. as the sea. Otnay, Burns, fy others. as the sea his judgments lie. Watts. as an ocean. Sir W. Jones. Deep as the ocean is his mind. Play, Sulieman. as the mighty ocean. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as to the centre. T. Heyrvood, Southern, fy others. as a well. Shakespear, Otnay. Deep as heaven is high. Chapman. Deep as is Parnassus high. Randolph. as thought. Marston. as reason. Savage. DEJECTED as the lonely dove. Gay. Thus Israel's monarch stood, when at the fable's close his conscience smote him, while the stern messenger of God pronounced, THOU ART THE MAN ! Cumberland. DELECTABLE as in summer's fervent violence the cold wind and snow are. Barclay. DELICIOUS as the breath of Maia on violets diffused. Thom- son. like the sweet south that breathes upon a bank of violets, stealing and giving odour. Shakespear. as the wind that is breathed from Paradise. Parnell. as the dew that lies on morning roses. Jonson. DELIGHT like that of a sailor when the prize has struck in DEL battle. Byron. like that of a miser when filling his hoarded chest. Ibid. DELIGHTFUL to the eye, as music to the ear. Sir P. Sidney. as fancy to poets, music to the ears, or beauty to the eyes. Duchess of Newcastle. as the recovery of lost sight. Pres- ton's App. Rhodius. No sound is so delightful to the mother's ear as the voice of her infant. Specimens of Hindoo Literature, by N. E. Kindersley. Delightful as the copious shower whose drops refresh the new shorn plain. Merrick. as the soft whispers of the southern wind that play through trembling trees. Dryden. as from the violets' bank with odours sweet breathes every gale. Gay, as when the smiling face of youth- ful May invites soft Zephyr to her fragrant lap. J. G. Cooper. More delightful than blooming morn's approach, even then in youthful prime of opening May when from the portals of the saffron east, she sheds fresh roses and ambrosial dews. T. Warton. DELUGE. Thy barbarous foes like a destructive flood, deluge thy lands, and sweep thy wealth away. Alexander Bicknell. DELUSIVE as a dream. Fenton. as a midnight dream. Cam- thorn. DEMONSTRATIVE. It is a principle as demonstrative as truth. Marmion. as Euclid. Duchess of Newcastle. DEMURE and chaste as any vestal nun. Pope. Look as de- murely as a saint. Play, Shoemakers Holiday. Look as de- murely as if he were asking his father's blessing. Play, Jack Drum's Entertainment. Demure as if butter would not melt in your mouth. Ravenscroft. Sitting as demure as a cat. Cumberland. DEPART like mist when it flies before the rustling wind along the brightening vale. Ossian. My fame is departed like morn- ing mist. Ibid. DESCEND as gently as night dews fall to the earth. R. Blair. Descend like purifying rain. Watts. Descend copiously like DIP rain. J. Hervey. Descend like a serenely setting sun. Jenyns. like the bright officer of day. Sir W. Davenant. Descend in majesty as Jove to Semele. Play, Triumphs of Virtue. Descend like the managed falcon on the dove. Hoole's Ariosto. Sleep descends upon the eye-lids of the happy, like heaven's dew- drops on the earth, cool and refreshing. Colman. Descend softly as snow-flakes. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms, DESTROY like a general plague. Drayton. A. Hill Even your eyes like basilisks destroy. J. Tracy. the tempest in its rage Bursts not with greater fury to destroy, Than darts thy vengeance on thy feeble foe. H. Smithers. DESTRUCTIVE as the lightning of heaven. Fragments of An- cient Poetry. as the frost that bites the first-born infants of the spring. Shakespear. Like rushing waters that deluge all the plain, destructive, dreadful. R. Barford. DETEST. My heart detests him as the gates of hell. Pope. Detest her as a fiend of hell. Pasquil's Nightcap. DEVOURING as the deluge. C. Hopkins. as the locusts' ra- vening tribes. T. Maurice. DEVOUT as vestals. Behn. DIE away like the evening breeze among the grass of the rocks. Ossian. like zephyrs ceasing at the close of day. Scott of Amwell. like breezes with declining day. Penrose. like the breeze that met the orient ray, and 'mid the noon-day fervours fann'd the grove. C. Fox. DIFFER as much as heaven and hell. Play, Like will to like. Differ as much from it as light from darkness. Sir W. Scott. Differ as much as the vital heat from the burning of a fever. South. Differ as the fire of heaven differs from that grosser element which the peasant piles upon his smouldering hearth. Sir W. Scott. Differ as far as a glow-worm from a star. J. Day. as far as does the sea from fire. May. DIFFERENCE as vast as between inadvertency and delibera- DIF tion. South. As wide as is the difference between the appear- ance of the world when it lay in its primitive chaos without form and void, and the appearance it has now assumed when resplendent with the light of the sun, and decked with the beau- ties of nature. H. Blair. There is as much difference between the clear representations of the understanding then, and the obscure discoveries that it makes now, as there is between a casement and a key-hole. South. as much as between white and black. J. Ford. as between jet and ivory. Shakespear. as between a calm and a storm. Duchess of Newcastle. Difference as great as the brightness of the sun and the slender light of a candle. R. Greene. DIFFERENT as heaven and hell. Play, Jeronimo. as good and evil. Atterbury. as light and darkness. Colman. as night and day. Centlivre. as the light of a glow-worm to the ra- diance of a star. Tillotson. as sable ebony to Alpine snow. Brewer. as crabs to apples of the Hesperides. Brorvne. Their two natures as different are, as the two poles. /. Shir- ley. Knowledge perfected by practice, is as much different from mere speculation, as the skill of doing a thing is, from being told how a thing is to be done. Tillotson. They are no more like than chalk to cheese, than black to white. Play, Marriage of Wit and Science. DIFFUSIVE as the light. N. Cotton. like the sun. Durfey. as the sun's beams. E. Howard. as the air. Peaps. Far dif- fused as fancy's wing can travel. Coleridge. DILATING as the spreading air. Duchess of Newcastle. DIM like the darkened moon behind the mist of night. Ossian. like reflected moon-beams on a distant lake. Ibid. like the pale moon in morning day. Sir W. Scott. A form dim as the bow just mixing in the cloud. Ogilvie. DIRE as when friends are rankled into foes. Thomson. as the bird of death at midnight sings his dreary bowlings in the sick man's ear. Lusiad. DIS DIRTY as earth. Fielding. DISAPPEAR as the early dew. Sacred Script. as a morning cloud. Ibid. like morning stars at the sun's presence. Play, Unfortunate Usurper. as stars before the sun. Settle. DISCONSOLATE as a bee that has lost its sting. Shadwell. like to a turtle that hath lost her mate. Play, Rhodon fy Iris. DISMAL as the depth of hell. Beaumont $ Fletcher; Play, Maid's Tragedy. as when the tempest of November blew the winter trumpet till its failing breath went moaning into silence. Cornwall. as the hidden dwelling of the winds where storms engender. Sir W. Davenant. Dismal it sounds like the last groan which men in torture breathe. Ibid. Dismal, hateful, and dispiriting, as darkness. South. as the grave. R. Hurst. DISMAYED. The wandering gadling in the summer-tide that finds the adder with his reckless foot, starts not dismayed more suddenly aside. Sir Thomas Wyatt. Like him that wandering in the bushes thick, treads on the adder with his reckless foot, reared for wrath, swelling her speckled neck, dismayed gives back all suddenly for fear. Earl of Surrey. DISPARITY as great as between empire and advice, counsel and command, between a companion and a governor. South. Disparity of nature great as between finite and infinite. Ibid. DISPERSED as chaff before the wind. Merrick. Dispersed and scattered, whisked up into the air, like summer dust by whirlwinds. Southern. as a mist that is driven away with the beams of the sun and overcome with the heat thereof. Wisdom of Solomon. DISPROPORTIONATE. But why do I compare things to- gether so infinitely disproportionate as temporal with eternal, corporeal with spiritual, the death of the body alone, with the death of soul and body too, or the benches of men with the tribunal of God? South. DISSEMBLING as the sea. Beaumont $ Fktcher ; Play, Maid's Tragedy. DIS DISSOLVE like snow. Byron. as ductile wax before the breath of Vulcan. W. Thompson. as wax before the fire. Merrick. as snow on Salmon at the tepid touch of southern gales by slow degrees dissolves. W. Thompson. like clouds before sun. Poems on State Affairs. As a morning dream. Southey. DISTANT as the moon from the earth. W. Rowley. as the globes of heaven and earth. Gibber. as earth is from the sky. Cooke's Heslod. as a star. N. Cotton. as vice and virtue. Tillotson. as heaven from hell. G. Peele. The Robbers, a Play from Schiller. as pole from pole. Jacob. Your tem- per and mine are distant as the poles. J. Corye. DISTASTEFUL as death. Play, Spanish Band. DISTIL like early . dew. Watts. like heavenly dew. Ibid. Distil more sweetly than the dew. J. Hervey. as the evening dew. Ibid. DISTRESSFUL like the plaintive bird who views the plundered nest, and mourns her ravished young. Antigone, in Greek Tra- gic Theatre. DISTURBED and broken like a sick man's sleep. Prior. DOCILE as schooled infancy. R. C. Maturin. DOLEFUL and sweet as waking nightingales when they repeat in groves their tragic tales. N. Lee. DOUBLING and turning like a hunted hare. Dryden. DOUBT. Full of doubts and doubles like a hunted hare when she is near tired. Dryden. Doubtful and hovering like ex- piring flame that mounts and falls by turns, and trembles o'er the brand. Ibid. Doubtful it stood as two spent swimmers that do cling together and choke their art. Shakespear. DREAD it as bad as a beggar does a whipping-post. E. Ward. Dread him as calf the bear, or sheep the wolf. Weber's old Metrical Romances. DREADFUL as celestial hate. Pope. as heaven's curses. Glap- DRI thorne. as Mars. N. Rone, E. Smith. as the god of war. Pope, Hurst, fy others. Noise, more dreadful than the din of war. J. Oldmixon. Dreadful as the mandrake's groan. Shake- spear. More dreadful than death. N. Lee, Centlivre, fy others. than is the frown of Jove. Anne Countess of Winchilsea. Dreadful as the sight of a death's head. Play, Abdicated Prince. More dreadful than the blackest night. Blackmore. than the depth of blackest night. C. Hopkins, in Dryden's Miscellany. than a tempest. Middleton. Dreadful as the storm. Pye, Campbell. as thunder. Gildon, W. Rose. as killing thunder. C. Cotton. as lightning. G. Sewell. as lightning from the midnight cloud. Dr. John Browne. as the sea to inexperi- enced mariners. C. Hopkins. like ocean warring against a rocky isle. Byron. More dreadful than howling of a wolf. Sir P. Sidney. I will come in terror clad, more dreadful than the pest that walks in midnight darkness. Dr. John Browne. Pause, dreadful as when a multitude expect the earthquake's second shock. Southey. a phantom train Of shapes infernal, dreadful as the band Raised by infuriate fancy to torment Some wretched maniac in his wildest hours, When ghastly demons burst upon his eye, When nought assail his ear but shrieks of woe, And Horror's deadly fiend with iron hand Grasps his convulsive heart. Charles Fox. DREARY as Chaos ere creation's reign. Translation of Vol- taire s Henriade. DRINK as earth imbibes the shower. T. Moore. as the rain- bow drinks the dew. Ibid. as ocean quaffs up the rivers. Ibid. as the sun inhales the sea. Ibid. My drooping soul drinks up your words as the parched earth does a refreshing shower. Ravenscroft. As the drooping flower parched by the sun drinks up the balmy dew. /. B. 'Burges. Drink like a fish. Durfey, Farquhar, others. Drink water like a fleece. D ray ton. E DRI DRIVEN as the smoke out of a chimney. Sacred Script. Driven away like the dissolving smoke. /, Hervey. as the chaff that is driven with a whirlwind out of the floor. Sacred Script. like chaff before the wind of heaven. Sir W. Scott. as faded leaves by autumn's wind. Pollok. DROOP like over-ripened corn. ShaJcespear. like a lily. Gay. like the lily beaten down with rain. Play, Nero. like a lily in a morning shower she droops her head. J. Miller. like a lily over-charged with rain. Byron. Like a lily drooping she bowed her head. Gay. as a lily at the blighting gale. T. Percy, in Dodsley's Collection. like tulips over-charged with wet. Presttvich. like lovely violets over-charged with too much morning dew. Chapman. like a rose surcharged with morning dew. Dryden. like a fair flower o'er-charged with morning dew. C. Johnson. Drooping like roses over-charged with morning dews. C. Cotton. Droop like the spread rose beneath the inclement shower. Smollett. Drooping like the chill nipped flower. Royal Merchant, Comic Opera. Droop and hang his head like flowers oppressed with showers. T. Killi- gren. Thou hast seen the musk rose newly blown disclose its bashful beauties to the sun, till an unfriendly chilling storm descended, crushed all its blushing glories in their prime, bowed its fair head and blasted all its sweetness ; so drooped the maid. H. More. Her fair form, more lovely in distress, droops like the tender blossom of the spring, beat by the gathered force of pitiless showers. Play, Fair Circassian. with such a patron, Fair learning towers above the carping crowd, And useful merit all its powers expands ; Whilst left unshelter'd in the wilds of nature, By slander blasted, and by want bow'd down, Like an exotic to the north expos'd, The fairest flow'rs of genius droop and die. Play, True Patriotism. So the chaste flow'r, whose copious incense pour'd, Glads ev'ry sense, and charms the ravish'd eye, DRY That spreads its blushing beauties to the sun, Untimely cropt by some rude gazer's hand, Dejected droops, and in its bloom decays. Herminius Espasia, by Hart. Drooping like a blossom of the spring that wintry gales have strook. Harriet Lee. Like a tender plant o'ercharged with dew, thus droop your lovely head. Goring. Droop as youthful plants surcharged with storm and rain, hang their moist heads, and languish on the plain, bent to the roots. Preston's App. Rhodius. As the floweret blighted by the storm she drooped. SmitJiers. She drooped like a fair flower beneath a storm. TJiomas Cooke. Droop in beauteous spring like blasted flow- ers. Fielding. Droop like the faded flower. C. Fox. like a willow. Byron. as a wild-born falcon with clipped wing. Byron. Like to a turtle that hath lost her mate, drooping she sits. N. Field. DROP as the rain. Sacred Script. -like leaves in autumn. Car- tell, Gay, $ others. Drop down like an autumn leaf. Sir W. Davenant. like summer fruit from shaken trees. W. Cart- nright. like mellow fruit. Dr. Porteus. Drop as autumn's sickliest grain. E. Young. They dropped before his blows like mellow fruit before the winds of autumn. G. Soane. DROWN like a boundless ocean deep enraged. Play, Cupid's Whirligig. Drown our land like to an inundation. Play, Va- liant Welshman. DROWZY as a dormouse. T. Heyrvood, S. Sheppard. as the clicking of a clock. W. Cowper. DRUNK as a bacchanal. Durfey. as David's sow. Gay. as a pig. P. Pindar. as a common fidler. Play, The Puritan. as a piper. Gay. as an emperor. Centlivre. as a lord. Jevorn, Coffey, 8f others. as rats in the Canaries. Glapthornc. as an owl. Duke of Newcastle. as a mouse. Ingeland. DRY up like dew at the ascending sun. Play, Honest Lawyer. Dry as the parched summer. T. Heywood. as pumice. Syl- rcster, South. as dust. Durfey. as saw-dust. H. Higdcn, E2 D UL as pepper. Dekker. as a sponge. Durfey.az the remain- der biscuit after a voyage. Shakespear. as a bone. /. Shir- ley. More dry than a fever. R. Brome. DULL as death. Chapman. Your disposition is more dull than if you were to be chief mourner at a corpse. Glapthorne. Dull as night. Shakespear. as the moon eclipsed. John Gait. as Lethe is. Mirandola. Duller than the fat week that roots itself in ease on Lethe's wharf. Shakespear. Dull as Decem- ber. Mirandola. as winter's sleet. R. Bloomjield. as a cloudy day. Duchess of Newcastle. as a rainy day. Play, Fickle Shepherdess. as a weeping willow. Play, Country Gen- tleman. Dull as any log. Poems on State Affairs. Duller than a post. Swift, Gay, $ others. than the edge of a buf- foon's wooden falchion. Sir W. Scott. Dull as the muddy marsh and standing lake. N. Rome. Dull and cold as earth and water. B. Hoadly. Dull as lead. Jonson. as a stone. W. Dunbar. as a Dutch commentator. Jenyns. as a chan- cery suit. Fielding. as dining by the clock. Epilogue to Dryden's Evening's Love. as a dormouse. Beaumont 8$ Fletch- er, Chapman, fy others. as an ox. Duke of Newcastle, Field- ing. as an ass. Lidgate, T. Scott. as the sound of a full hogshead. W. Walker. DUMB as death. Southern, Durfcy, fy others. as night. Play, Palladius Sf Irene. Dumb and silent as the dead of night. Bp. Hall. as a stone. Chaucer, Wyatt. as a fish. Jonson, O'Keeffe, fy others. as oysters. S. Foote. as a statue. C. Hopkins. like marble statues. A. Brown. Dumb as solemn sorrow ought to be. Otway. as a destined victim. A. Hill. as Westminster Hall in the long vacation. Green's Tu quoque. as a dog. Coffey. DURABLE as brass. W.Sampson. More durable than brass or marble. J. Jones. Dr. Johnson. than adamant. H. Boyd. DUSKY like night. Byron. EM P E. as a tiger. Chaucer. as the courser for the race. Dry- den. as greyhound on his game. Sir W. Scott. The grey- hound is not more eager at his flying game. R. Davenport. Eager as hounds when slipped upon their prey. Cumberland. EARLY as the dawn. Sir W. Davenant. as the day. T. Killi- grerv. Rise as early as the lark. T. Heywood, Durfey. EASY as a down bed. Shakespear. Easy to repose on as the mossy bank that is breathed upon by May. Sir W. Scott. Easily as in the blithesome hour of spring, a child doth crop the meadow flower. Southey. EBB and flow like the sea. Barclay, Shakespear, fy others. ECCENTRIC. He moves eccentric like a wandering star. Dry den. ECLIPSE. Her brighter eyes eclipse the diadem, as the meri- dian sun outshines the stars. Play, Faithful General. ELASTIC and light as air. /. H. Stevenson. ELATE as power. Savage. Elate and free as the light bound- ing air that fans the sultry cheek of summer. Play, Gonzanga. Stood like a sturdy oak, proudly elate. Thomas Whincop. ELEGANT as simplicity. W. Corvper. ELOQUENT. More eloquent than angel's tongue. Southey. Eloquent as Demosthenes. Play, Knack to know a Knave. as Cicero. Duchess of Newcastle, Author's Triumph. EMBRACE as ivy doth the wall. Harington. as the ivy clings around the oak. Hecuba, in Greek Tragic Theatre. Embrace it with as warm and willing rapture, as mothers clasp their infants. G. Colman. EMPTY as the air. Swift, Sir W. Scott. as air-pumps drained of air. Shenstone. as the whistling wind. Watts. as shadows are that fly o'er fields. Dry den. as a sucked egg. Beaumont ENC # Fletcher. Empty and unsubstantial as the bubble that flits along the stream and quickly bursts. James Templeton. ENCHANT like Circe. R. Greene. Sounds, as enchanting as the Theban lyre, or all the music of the spheres at once. J. Harris. Melody, more enchanting than the syren's. R. Greene. ENDLESS as eternity. /. Mitchell. as to tell the leaves on trees, the beasts on Alpine hills, or Hybla's bees. Congreve. as the ring. Play, Christmas Ordinary. ENTIRE as dying saints' confessions are. Behn. ENTRAPPED faster than gnats in cobwebs. Shakespear. ENTRENCHED like moles. J. H. Stevenson. ENVENOMED as an asp. W. Cowper. ENVIOUS as a rival. Wycherley. ERECT as alders. Dryden. ESTABLISHED as the days of heaven. Milton. like sun and moon. Sylvester. EVAPORATE like inflammable air. Burgoyne. EVEN as the brow of Cynthia. Dekker. EVIDENT as light. Sir W. Davenant. as day. Ibid. as day- light. T. Jordan. as is the universal light of day. Play, Damon fy Pythias. A time as evident as if it were pointed out by a sun-beam upon a dial. South. as mathematical de- monstration. Ibid. EXACT as clock-work. Play, School for Guardians. EXALTED as a god. Milton. EXCEED it, as chastity does incontinence. Peaps. She ex- ceeds her as much in beauty, as the first of May doth the last of December. Shakespear, Miller. The price of one soul doth exceed as far a life here, as the sun in light a star. Play, Queen. As far exceeding these as the great day-star, his pale-cheeked sister, or night's lesser beauties. Nabbs. Ex- FAD ceed as far as mid-day Phoebus doth the dullest star. W. Balmford. EXCEL, as the sun with beams most clear and bright excels the stars. Lidgate. Excel her as Cynthia does the lesser stars, or Venus the sea-nymphs. May. Wisdom excelleth folly as far as light excelleth darkness. Sacred Script. Excel as much as diamond does glass. Play, Life and Death of Lord Cromwell. Excelling as far as doth the daughter of the day all other lesser lights in light excel. Spenser. Excel as far as heaven's bright lamp doth a dull twinkling star. Poem, The Female Advocate. as far as heaven's illustrious lamp, a little star. Poem, The Great Birth of Man. Its whiteness does as far excel the driven snow, as the sun's bright rays a glittering star. M. Coppinger. EXCELLENT as angels. Beaumont $ Fletcher. EXHALED like morning dew before the sun. Settle. EXHAUSTLESS as the glorious font of day. ' Poem, The High- landers. EXPANSIVE as the light. R. Nevile. EXPIRE, as momentary sparks from the smitten steel. /. Hervey. EXULTING like a young conqueror, moving through the pomp of some triumphal day. Akenside. EYE their prey, as famished wolves survey a guarded flock. Sir W. Scott. F. JT ADE like the stars, when morn is in the skies. T. Moore. like the soft and summer light, that mingles gently with the darkness. Cornwall. like the prospects of a summer's day, which meet the night and in its shades decay. Universal Ma- gazine. like the dim day melting into night. /. Wilson, author F AI of Isle of Palms. like the morning dew. Campbell. Fade away like the pearled, dew of May. W. Balmford. Fade like a flower. Machin, Gay. like a spring flower. Sturm. like a summer flower. Ibid. Fade from thee as flower in May. Play, Every Man. T. Gibber. Fading as the morning flower. Poetical Calendar. Fade quick as the flower, or vernal blade. Merrick. like summer's grass. Old Poem, Thameseidos. As flowery grass cut down at noon, before the evening fades. Watts. Fade as a rose. Lidgate. Faded like the blasted rose. Penrose. Fading as the forest roses. James Hogg. Fade as doth the lily fresh, before the sunny ray. Spenser. like the fair flower, dishevelled in the wind. W. Comper. like a flower that feels no heat of sun. Spenser. like a withered autumn. Settle, Powell. Fading like a dream. G. Keate. Fade quick as a dream. Beattie. Fade like colours in the sun. C. Bullock. Fading like a dream. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. Fade on memory like a dream of night, whose fleeting shadows vanish from the dawn. C. A. Elton. like the meteor. John Lake. Love, like the gay colours of the rainbow, is apt to fade away all of a sudden. Farce, She is not Him, fyc. FAINT as evening shadows. Watts. as a glimmering taper's wasted light. Sir W. Jones. Faint and shy as bashful maiden's half-formed sigh. Sir W. Scott. FAIR as the sun. Pollok. as the bright sun. Chaucer. as Phoebus' sun. Spenser. as Phoebus. Hughes. Fairer than Phoebus, or the morning star. T. Forde. Fair as Phoebus' rays gilding the glittering air. Pooles Parnassus. Fair like Titan's shine. R. Greene. A face more fair than is the sun's bright beams, or snow-white Alps beneath fair Cynthia. Play, Knack to know a Knave. as the sun, when up the steep of heaven he rides in all the majesty of light. Bruce. Fair, mild, and strong as is a vernal sun. Thomson. as day. Shakespear, Beaumont $ Fletcher, fy others. Fairer than orient day. Poeti- cal Calendar. Fair as the break of opening day. W. Heard. F AI as day in its first birth. Sir W. Daienant. as early day. M, Pilkington. as day spring. W. Thompson. as the morn. Spenser, W. Browne, fy others. as the morning. Dryden, Lansdonne, others. as the grey-eyed morn. Denliam. as springing day. Spenser. as orient beams of light. Goring. as new-born light. Ibid. Fairer than the morning light. W. Thompson. Fair as the rising morn. Merrick. Fairer than the opening morn, when from the eastern hills the rising sun glads wakening nature with unclouded lustre. Play, Codrus. Fair as the bright morning. Chaucer. as the morning's brightest beam. The Nun, a poem. as roseate morn. Poem, Taliesin. as the morn in saffron mantle dight. Pye. as the blushing morn. N. Rome. as the chaste blushing morn. Beau- mont $ Fletcher. as the morning, when she ushers in the day with blushes. Nabbs. Fair as mild Aurora. Ogiloie. A countenance fairer than Aurora's looks, when all the East is gilded with her blush. Play, Trial of Chivalry. The sun, when he is by Aurora's roseal fingers decked, views not his repercussed self so fair upon the eastern 'main. Beaumont's Psyche. Fair as the first ruddy streaks of opening day. Behn. More fair than the red morning's dawn. N. Lee. Fair as the paintings of the purple morn. Dodsley's Collection. as the purple-blushing hours that paint the morning's eye. Shamrock. More fair than rosy morn, when first she smiles o'er the dew- brightened verdure of the spring. Smollett. Fair as vernal mornings. A. Sen-ard, A. S. Cottle. as a May morning rising from the East. N. Lee. Fairer than a morn of May. Sir W. Jones. Fair as summer morning. Sir W. Scott. as when the morning from the greedy waves with dewy beams up flies. Doyne's Tasso. as the light of the morning when the sun riseth, even a morning without clouds. Sacred Script. as the first smiles of summer mornings are. Play, Romulus and Hersilia. Fair, sweet, and fresher than a summer's morn. Shipman. as the eastern light, when day smiles at her birth. Sir W. Dacenant. as shoots the morning forth, spangled with pearls of transparent dew. /. Ford. F AI Dearest love ! fair as the eastern morn, When with her summer's robe she decks the plains, And hangs on ev'ry bush a liquid pearl In May's triumphing month. Tatham. Fair as the spring, when May's pellucid morns crimson the orient. A. Seward. Her morning bloom was doubly fair, Like summer's day-break, when we see The fresh dropt stores of rosy dew (Transparent beauties of the dawn), Spread o'er the grass their cob-web lawn, Or hang moist pearls on ev'ry tree, Hughes. Fair as the spring. Anthony Brown. Play, The Italians. as the face of spring, when rural songs and odours wake the morn to every eye. Akenside. as the spring in opening buds ar- rayed. Daphnis, a pastoral. as vernal fields in bloom. An- thony Brown. Fair as the face of nature did apppear, when flowers first peep'd, and trees did blossoms bear, and winter had not yet deform'd th' inverted year. Dryden. as the open- ing east. Prior. as the light of dawning day. Watts. as the day in its fairest birth, when all the year was May. Poole's Parnassus. as the face of day, when it is washed with morn- ing dews. E. Howard. Fairer than the face of fresh Aurora washed in eastern streams. Psyche, by Joseph Beaumont. than a star. Jonson. than a fixed star. J. Caulfeild. Fair as the morning-star. Blackmore, R. Pollok. as the star that beauti- fies the morn. Blackmore. as the new-born star that gilds the morn. Pope. as winter stars, or summer setting suns. N. Lee. The golden star that leads the radiant morn looks not so fair, fresh rising from the main. Langhorne. Fair as a star, when only one is shining in the sky. W. Wordsworth. as Phosphor, who foreruns the day. Southey. as light. Beau- mont fy Fletcher, Sir W. Davenant, fy others. as beams of light. T. Yalden, in Dryden's Miscellany. as the earliest beam of eastern light. Sir W. Scott. as the infant beams of new-born light. F. Betters. as unshaded light. Sir W. Da- F AI venant. as new-born light. Pix, Theobald, fy others. Fair as the new-born light, when Nature deck'd the smiling infant world ; when blossoms, fruits, and flowers, luxuriant form'd with open- ing sweets a bright eternal spring ; when all look'd gay ; when all was joy and transport. Eliza Haynood. Fairer than silver floods of light. Hughes. than the silver sky. Farquliar. than the light that great Apollo gives. Duchess of Newcastle. Fair as summer's face. Sylvester. as summer mornings. Dry- den. as summer's noon-tide. Tatliam. as blooming summer. Ramsay. as summer skies, when not a cloud deforms the blue expanse, but all is spotless beauty, fringed with celestial streams of sunny gold. W. Thompson. Fair and beautiful as is the morning star. T. Thompson. Fairer than the milky way. Play, Cornish Comedy. Fair as is the milk-white way of Jove. Play, Taming of a Shrew. Fairer than Jove's milky way. M. Stevenson. Fair as the summer beauty of the fields. Otway. as heaven. Mirandola. Fairer than heaven's clearest brow. Play, Sicilides. Fair as heaven's unsullied face. W. TJwmpson. Fairer than the evening air clad in the beauty of a thousand stars. Marlowe. Fairer than heaven's broad cause- way paved with stars. W. Wordsworth. than the skies. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. Fair as evening skies. W. Wordsworth. as the rainbow. Poem, Fragments of Fingal. as the rainbow of heaven. Ossian. as the rainbow shines through darkening showers. Montgomery. as the dyes that paint the heavenly bow. Jenyns. as the moon. Sacred Script., Ossian, fy otliers. as Cynthia. Poetical Calendar. More fair than the replenished moon. G. Sandys. Fair as moon-light. Byron. as moon-beam. R. Pollok. as the harvest moon. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. as the full moon setting on the hills. Ibid. Fairer than night's queen. G. Soane. Fair as nature from the chaos. Tate. Fairer than snow. Sylvester, Ossian. Fair and chaste as snow. Poetical Calendar. as mountain snow. Dryden's Miscellany, Garth, fy others. as sunless snow. T. Moore. as virgin snow. Settle, M. Stevenson. as descending snow, or mounting light. Dryden's Miscellany. F AI Fairer than falling snow, or rising light. Duke. than the snow that on the tempest's wing doth play. S. Bamford. than whitest snow on Scythian hills. Marlowe. Fair as the snow on the heath. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. Fairer than the snow of the North. Ibid. than the northern snow. Poem, Fragments of Fingal. than a hill of snow. Sir W. Jones. than pearly dew. M. Pilkington. Fair as the spangled dew- drops that adorn the breathing flowerets of the morn. Potter's Eschylus. More fair than rills that dimpling run. Robin Hood, an Entertainment. Fair as April. Sir W. Jones. Fairer than a green proudly bedecked in April's livery. Sir P. Sidney. Fair as the book of nature's lines. Watts. as May. A. Conley. Fairer than a morn of May. Sir W. Jones. Fair and lovely as the gladsome May. W. Browne. as Eden. E. Young, Matthew Rolleston. as the bloom of blowing Eden. Thomson. as blissful Eden. W. Thompson. as Eden's bowers. Cole- ridge. as the primal garden of mankind. G. Townsend. as the bud unblasted. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Fairer than the bud unfolding in a shower. Logan. than blooms that scent the vernal air. M. Pilkington. Fair as the opening blossoms. Dryden, Prior. as the silver blossom on the thorn. A. Seward. as opening flowers. Play, Different Widows. as opening flowers untainted yet with winds. Otway. as the spring's early flower. Bruce. as the spring's first flowers. A. Seward. Fairer than the bloom of earliest spring. T. Noble. Fair and sweet as springing flowers. Pix. Fair as rising flowers beneath the beams of May. A. Seward. Fairer than the flowers of May. Bruce. Fair and fresh as flowers in May. Spenser. Fairer than May's new painted blossoms. A. Conley. than the flowery meads in May. W. Hemmings, Dryden's Miscellany. Fair as the rose. Daniel, Swift, fy others. as the rose in May. Chaucer, Swift. as the first rose of spring. Play, Selim and Zuleika.- as opening roses. Shenstonc. as a full-blown rose. Machin. Fair as in their glory full-blown roses are. Durfey. as the full-blossomed rose. /. Pocock. as the rose-bud. Sir W. Scott. as the dew-sprinkled rose. F AI Poem, Sorrows of Love. as a flower in the sunshine. Chaucer, as the floweret that bedecks the lawn. G. Townsend. Fairer than whitest blossoms. A. Corvley. Fair as the lily. Chaucer, Sidney, fy others. Fairer than untouched lilies. Dryden's Miscellany. than spotless lilies. Poetical Calendar. Fair as the opening lily. Ramsay, Somervile. as the lily by the foun- tain side. A. Senard. as the lily clad in balmy snow. W. Thompson. as the lily of the vale, that gives its bosom to the gale, and opens in the sun. Logan. as new-blown lilies. Jonsoris Sad Shepherd, Ramsay. as the full-blown lily. /. Hervey. as the lily in the watery glade. Dodsley's Collection. Fairer than whitest lilies. Play, Faithful Shepherd. Fansharv. than virgin lily's radiant hue. M. Pilkington. than the vernal bloom of valley lily opening in a shower. Bruce. Fair as the daisy. Tickell. Play, Irishman in London. as the prim- rose. A. Corvley. as the snowdrop. A. Cherry. Fairer than jessamine. The Man-hater, in Foote's Comic Theatre. Fair as the lovely blooms of the peach-tree. Browne. as the poplar rising on the plain. Jago. as the damsen, or the sky-dyed sloe. Poetical Calendar. as the blushing grape. Poems on State Affairs. as cygnet's down. N. Cotton. Fairer than softest down. M. Pilkington. than the plumes of swans. Dryden. Fair as the snowy swan. Edward Jones's Poetical Relics of Welsh Bards. Fairer than the snowy breast of the tall swan, whose proudly swelling chest divides the wave. Gay. Fair as the down of swans, or mountain's snow. W. Hawkins. More fair than down of aged swans. E. Sherburne. than Venus' swans, or spotless ermines. Glap- thorne. than Venus' doves. M. Stevenson. Fair and soft as Venus' doves. Play, Fickle Shepherdess. as Venus. Spenser, Behn, fy others. as Cupid's mother. Moses Mendez. as the mother of Love. Universal Magazine, for May 1776. Fairer than love's queen. F. Beaumont. Fair as the queen of beauty. A. Philips. as beauty's lovely queen. T. Rodd's Ballads. Fair and lovely as the queen of love. Play, Arraignment of Paris. as was the Cyprian queen. T. Brere- FAI mood. Fair and lovely as a goddess. Browne. as a goddess. Fragments in Greek Tragic Theatre. as heavenly goddesses. Dancer. Fairer than the poets feign the queen of love in her most artful dress. Centlivre. as the queen of beauty and of love, when first she sprung from ocean's fruitful foam. Doynes Tasso. as the goddess who sprung from the sea. Ramsay. Rise, fair as a new-born Venus from the sea. Friendship's Of- fering. Fairer than the god of love. F. Beaumont. Fair, like Cupid. Gildon. Fair as the neck of Paphia's boy. T. Moore. as love. Sotheby's Oberon. as the inhabitants of heaven. Fix. as immortal beings. Play, Fickle Shepherdess. as a cherub. Theobald. as an angel. T. Scott, W. Bailey, fy others. Fair as imagination paints young angels. Behn. as a nymph of paradise. S. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Litera- ture. as Eve in paradise. Herrick. Fairer than fairest Eve. Play, Herminius 8f Espasia, by Hart. She was once as fair and innocent as her parent Eve, when first she wakened from creation. C. Macklin. as the daughters of Job. Sacred Script. as Diana. Mrs. Manlcy, P. Hoare. Fairer than the virgin Diana. Play, Looking-glass. than Naiad of the flood, or her who ruled the forest scene in days of yore, the huntress queen. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. than Daphne. Gildon. Fair as Helen. R. Greene, Swift, fy others. as Hebe. Rolt, Gunning, $ others. as the Graces. Gildon. as Iris. Poem, Time, by J. Gompertz. as an unspotted maid. M. Pilkington. Fair as luxury has painted the nymphs of paradise to Eastern minds. Hugh Kelly. Fairer than the fabled Hours. H. Donning. Fair as virtue. Beaumont fy Fletcher, J. Dennis. as the fame of virtue. N. Rowe. as truth. Ibid. as innocence. C. Gibber, Boyle Earl of Orrery.-^-as pictvired innocence. Thomas Gis- borne. as immortal fame in smiles arrayed. Lusiad. as ho- nour. Falconer. as virtuous friendship. Akenside. as the graceful tear that streams for others' woes. Ibid. as the brow of piety. T.Middleton. Fair as fair may be. Marlowe. Fairer than the ideal beauty that warms the lover's hopes, or poet's fancy. P. Francis. Fair as the forms that wove in fan- F AL cy's loom, float in light vision round the poet's head. W. Mason. Forms, as fair as ever rose on a poet's sweet slumbers. Ber- nard Barton. Fairer than the forms which fancy draws when glowing genius warms. Bertram, by Sir Egerton Brydges. Fair as are the visions of a poet's solitude. Landon. More fair than rocks of pearl, or the morning star. T. Forde. than rocks of pearl and precious stone. Play, Taming of a Shrew. Mar- lowe's Tamerlane. Fair as the finest gold. Machin. as silver. Prior. Fair and sleek as alabaster. Sir P. Sidney. Fair, but cold as alabaster. N. Lee. as a text B. in a copy-book. Shakespear. as milk. Byron. Fairer than a crystal glass. Play, Wars of Cyrus. FAITHFUL as angel guardians. Play, Emilia. Vows as faith- ful as a dying saint's. Centlivre. Faithful as the magnet. W. S. Walker. as the needle to its pole. Centlivre. as the pole star. Cumberland. as the silent mirror shows in its true bosom. /. G. Cooper. Annual on this day he came as faithful as the sun himself. Play, The Witness. Faithful as the turtle's mate. W. Hawkins. FAITHLESS as the sea. C. Hopkins, Gay, fy others. as the wind. Quarles, Drydcn. as the fleeting wind. John Bidlake. FALL like a meteor. Play, Virgin Martyr. like a bright ex- halation in the evening. Shakespear. I see thy glory like, a shooting star fall to the base earth from the firmament. L. Theobald. When he falls, he falls like Lucifer, never to hope again. Skakespear. Fall like summer dew on me. Sir P. Sidney. Fall on me like a silent dew. Herrick. Fall like a spangling dew. Ibid. Fall softer than the morning dew. Mil- bourne. Fall softly as dew. M. A. Browne. Soft they fell as heaven's blest dew upon the thirsty hills. Cumberland. Fall thick as midnight dew. R. Shicl. Like showers. T. May, Southey. Fall softly as fruitful showers. Sir W. Davenant. Tears fall fast as rains from heaven. W. Dimond. Fall like the rain-drops of the summer shower. Southey. like hoary- headed frosts in the fresh lap of the crimson rose. Shakespear. F AL Fall soft as feathered snow. Play, Fairy Queen. Fall to earth as gently as the snow. Crown. Fall gently like fleecy snow. Ecclestone. Fall soft as flakes of snow. J. PL Ste- venson. She fell as a wreath of snow before the sun in spring. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. Fall like a wreath of snow which slides from the rock. Ossian. Fall as thick as hail. Marlowe, E. Ward, fy others. like autumn fruit. Dryden. Fall off like fruit grown fully ripe. M. Green. Fall like the thistle's head beneath autumnal winds. Ossian. like grass before the mower's hand. Drayton. Fall beneath my arm like feeble grass cropt by the mower's scythe. Rolt. Fall like grass before the sharpest scythe. J. Banks. like wheat be- fore the reaper's hand. Play, Battle of Aughrim. Fall before him, like the field before the reapers. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. Like ripened corn before the sweeping scythe. E. Young. So beneath the reaper's sickle falls the ridge of standing corn. T. RodcTs Ballads. Fall as thick as harvests before hail, grass before scythes, corn below the sickle. Byron. Fall thicker than the chequered leaves the stern winds ^end and ravish from the trees when yellow autumn turns them into gold. A. Brewer. Fall thick as autumnal leaves when winter nips the trees with his new frosts. Doynes Tasso. Fall thick as leaves when tempests shake the trees, and frosts severe nip the moist sap. Ibid. When they come to be nipped with the frosts of adversity, their friends will fall off like leaves in au- tumn. Tillotson. Fall as light as the sigh of a lover. Sir W. Scott. Light they fell as when earth receives in morn of frost the withered leaves that drop when no winds blow. Ibid. Your dying accents fell as wrecking ships, after the dreadful yell, sink murmuring down and bubble up a noise. Dryden. The word Death fell on him like a thunderbolt. Flo- rentine Lovers, in the Liberal. Fall tremendous on his ears like bursting thunder on the rifted rock. Play, Paetus Sf Arria. Wherever the doctrine of Christ came, the idolatry of the world was not able to stand before it, but fell down like Dagon be- fore the ark. Tillotson. F AM FALLACIOUS as the harlot's kiss. S. Duck, in Dodsley's Col- lection. FALSE as inconstancy. L. Theobald. as the smooth deceit- ful sea. Watts. as the ocean's smiles. Settle. as the insa- tiate seas that smiling tempt the vain adventurer. Behn. He has a heart as false as seas in calms, smiles first to tempt, then ruins with its storms. Ibid. False as is the smooth faced sea which every wind disturbs. Cockain. as the wind, the water, or the weather. Otway. Falser than flattering seas, or fleeting wind. N. Lee. than seas. Sylvester. False as waters, winds, or wandering fires. N. Lee. as water. Shakespear, Congreve, others. as the stream. S. Boyse. Falser than the smiles of faithless April. A. Corvley. False as canker- blooms in spring. Thurlorv. as air. Shakespear. as fleeting air. R. Barford. as wind. Shakespear, C. Sounders, $ others. as the unconstant winds. M. Bladcn. as watery bubbles blown by wind. Lansdorvne. as sandy earth. Shakespear. as stairs of sand. Ibid. as a quicksand. Cumberland. as the loose coquet's inveigling airs. Gay. as the adidterate promises of fa- vourites in power when poor men court them. Otrvay. Falser than the smiles of old grown tyrants, or the sea when with its smoothest brow it courts to death. Play, Constant Nymph. False as vows made in wine. Shakespear. as fox to lamb. Ibid. as wolf to heifer's calf. Ibid. as pard to the hind. Ibid. As a harlot's tears. Durfey. Falser than the weeping crocodile. Dry den. than crocodiles. Durfey. False as the fowler's artful snare. Smollett. as clouds that flit before the wind. Hoole's Ariosto. as dicers' oaths. Shakespear. as a pander's face. C. Butler. as Judas. South. as Phaon to Sappho, or Jason to Medea. G. Colman. Falser than the devil. Beaumont $ Fletcher. False as hell. Shakespear, Beaumont Sf Fletcher, fy others. as the smoke of hell. Sir W. Scott. Falser than malice in the mouth of envy. M. Fix. FAMILIAR as household words. Shakespear, Sir W. Scott. F FAN as my sleep. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Familiar to my couch as sleep. SeivelL Familiar to her as the dew to the mountain daisy. Sir W. Scott. FANTASTIC as winds. Sir W. Davenant. FAR as the utmost bounds of creation extend. MerricJc. as the world's remotest ends. Watts. as the earth, and air, and seas extend. Poetical Calendar. as the utmost verge of earth or sky. H. Carey. as the vast shore washed by the farthest sea. Otrvay. Far as the ocean waters roll. /. Montgomery. Re- moved as far as danger from delight, as hell from heaven. C. Gibber. As far from help as limbo is from bliss. Titus An- dronicus. Far as the sun is above the moon. Play, Free Will, by H. Cheeke. as the journeys of the sun. Watts. Reported is as far as shines the sun in any place. Lidgate. As far as Phoebus doth in his sphere shine. Ibid. Far as Phcebus in the sphere celestial doth spread his beams. Ibid. as Phoebus spreads his glorious flame. J. Taylor. Whose worthiness as far abroad doth fly, as Phcebus doth run compass-bout the sky in one day's space. Lidgate. Far as Phcebus giveth light. Ibid. Far as Phcebus compasseth the sky. Ibid. as ever Sol or Luna shined. /. Taylor. as the east is from the west. Watts. as the distant poles. A. Portal. As far from fraud as heaven from earth. Shakespear. Far as heaven. Moses Brown. As far as white Aurora's dews are sprinkled through the air. Chapman. Far as is the eastern Inde. J. Taylor. Far as the morn its early beam displays, Or where the star of ev'ning darts its rays ; Far as wide earth is stretch'd, or oceans roll, Where blow the winds, or heav'n invests the pole. Supplement to Dodsley's Collection. FAST as time's swift pinions can convey. Boyse. Ride faster than the fleeting air, or racing clouds. J. Banks. Fly faster than the rushing thought. Ibid. Fast as Jehu drove for a crown. Churchill. as mill wheels strike. Shakespear. Fast and spotless as an alabaster rock. Glapthorne. FIC FAT as butter. Jonson, Lilly, fy others, as grease. Sacred Script. as a whale. Chaucer. as a hog. Play, Contention between Liberality and Prodigality. as bacon. Sir W. Dave- nant. as the heifer at grass. Sacred Script. as plenty. H. Ward. FATAL as the eyes of basilisks. Banks, Dryden. Eyes, more terrible and fatal than a basilisk's. Play, Unfortunate Usurper. More fatal than the envenomed viper's bite. Somervile. than the thunder's force. Hoole's Ariosto. Fatal as the lightning. C. Hopkins.' More fatal than Medusa's head. Otway. Fatal, expensive, ruinous, as war. C. Davenant. FATHOMLESS as hell. E. Young. FAWN like a spaniel. T. Middleton. Fawning as a dog. Smol- lett. FEARFUL as a siege. Shakespear. as the breaking billow. Byron. as a young colt. Suckling. -as a hare. Strode, Ward. Fearfully as doth a galled rock o'erhang and jutty his con- founded base. Shakespear. FEARLESS as valour. B. Hoole. as the strong winged eagle. Ossian. FEEBLE as the cradled infant. Cumberland. as dissolving smoke. J. Hervey.as the threads which the light spider weaves upon the grass. Cumberland. FELL as death. Shakespear, C. Gibber. More fell than tem- pest, plague, and fire. W. Sotkeby. than anguish, hunger, or the sea. Shakespear. than tigers on the Libyan plain. Pope. as a lioness in Libya's plain. Garth. FEROCIOUS as a tiger. Smollet. FERTILE as earth. Waller. as Tempe. E. Young. FERVENT as glorious noon. Watts. FICKLE as the moon. Sir W. Scott. as the horned moon, or changing weather. Poem, Paddy Hew. Fickle and changing like the moon. Poems on State Affairs. Fickle and incon- F2 FIE stant as the air. Play, Nero. as the flying air. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Fickle and fierce as wavering whirlwinds blow. A. Hill. as the wind. E. Ward, Gay, $ others. as the sea or wind. Somervile. as the wave or wind. Dodsley's Collec- tion, as April weather. Play, Lord of the Manor. as a changeful dream. Sir W. Scott. FIERCE as those bright ministers whom heaven sends- forth to punish the presuming sons of men. Lillo. As the wrath of God. G. Townsend. as the vengeance of a god. Settle. as the vengeance of an angry god. Powell. as death. Dryden. Fiercer than famine, war, or spotted pestilence. N. Rome. Fierce as the thoughts which mortal man control, when love and rage contend and tear the lab'ring soul. N. Rowe. Fiercer than hate. Home. Fierce as frenzy's fevered blood. Sir W. Scott. as ten furies. Milton. as a ruthless fiend. G. Tonnsend. Fiercer than a jealous woman. Daniel. Fierce as Jove. Pomfret. as Mars. Play, Looking-glass. N. Rome. Fierce and majestic as young Mars. N. Lee. Fierce and comely as the god of war. M. Bladen. as the god of battles. Pope. Fly fierce as the falling thunderbolt. Chatterton. Fierce as the bolt that flames along the skies. Poem, Ilderim. Fiercer than lightnings. Dryden. Fierce as the lightning bursting from the arm of Jove. Pope. Fierce and transient as the lightning's flash. Play, Paetus < Arria. Fierce as those destructive fiery forked shafts which cleave the oak, rend steeples to their base, and wrap the piny forests in a blaze. Play, Tlie Revolution. as thunder. C. Gibber, E. Ward. as fire. Fairfax, Dryden, fy others. as a flood of flame by Vulcan sent, it flew. Pope. Flame, fierce as is the noon-tide sun. Southey. Fierce as con- flicting fires the combat burns. Pope. Fiercer than the wind. Sylvester. Fierce as a whirlwind. Pope, B. Martyn. as the rapid whirlwind. Antigone, in Greek Tragic Theatre. Rage in his soul is as the whirlwind fierce. Hannah More. Fierce as a storm. Duke, Gay, <$r others. as wintry storm. /. Philips. as a winter storm upon the main. Southern. Fiercer than storms of wind. Dryden's Miscellany. Fierce as a roaring FIE storm. Ossian. Fierce in war as the mountain storm. Ibid. Fiercer than a thousand storms. T. Day. Fierce as when tempests on the wat'ry waste Confound the elements with hideous roar, Heave the swoln surge, and shake th' astonish'd shore. W. Richardson. Fiercer than the outrageous swelling sea. Play, Faithful Shep- herd. More fierce than Hydra. J. Banks, Garth. Fierce as a savage that infests the plain. C. Goring. as a lion. Lid- gate, Spenser, 8$ others. as a lion when provoked. Otway. as any lion when men him chase. Lidgate. as a hunted lion in the toils. A. Hill. as a lion in a cage. Play, Candlemas- day. as hungry lions of the desert. Otway. as the mountain lions bathed in blood, or foaming boars. Pope. as the lion from the covert springs, when hunger gives his rage the whirl- wind's wings. Mickle's Lusiad. Fiercer than the lion rushes from his den. J. Hervey. Fierce as a tiger. A. Frounce. Play, Wars of Cyrus ; fy others. as the Midian tiger. Poolers Par- nassus. More fierce than robbed tiger. Play, Sicilides. More fierce and more inexorable far than empty tigers, or the roaring sea. Shakespear, Otway. Fierce as the tiger which sharp hunger drives amidst the bleating flock. G. E. Howard. Fierce and furious as a fasting tiger. J. O'Keeffe. as a tiger rushing from his lair. Somervile. as a panther. Cumberland. as the marked leopard. R. Shiel. as evening wolves. Sacred Script. as the hungry wolf. /. Ogilvie. as a famished wolf. Cumberland. Fiercer than ravening wolves that range by night. Play, Youth's Comedy. Fierce and remorseless as the prowling wolf, that nightly makes the helpless flock his prey. C. Lennox. as wild bulls. Dekker. More fierce than savage bulls. G. Sandys. Fierce as the foaming boar that whets his tusks when the bold hunter hath destroyed his young. Dr. John Browne. Fiercer than kites. Jago. Fierce as a bandog that has newly broke his chain. Etherege. as a startled adder. Pope. Fiercer than the ravenous shark. Falconer. More fierce than pi rates. Fielding. than cannon. Dryden. FIE FIERCELY as destroying whirlwinds rise, or as clouds dash when thunder shakes the skies. Otmay. FIGHT like a lion. N. Lee. FINE as Arachne's web. Nabbs, J. Beaumont. Fine as the tex- ture by Arachne laid o'er some young plant when glittering to the view with many an orient pearl of morning dew. Hayley. Robes more fine than dark Arachne's woof, or filmy gossa- mer. Anna Maria Porter. Fine as a cobweb. Miller. as a spider's threads. R. Barford. Cambric, fine as webs of spider. P. Pindar. Fine as the glittering gossamer. /. Wilson, au- thor of Isle of Palms. as floating gossamer. Ibid. as web of lightest gossamer. Sir W. Scott. Fine and frail as the web of a gossamer. Ibid. Thread, finer than the silkworm's, or the gossamer's. Southey. Finer than threads of lawn. C'arew. Fine as silkworms' thread. Southey. as silk. Stevenson. Wool, fine as the fleece that Jason fetched from Colchos. Greene's Arcadia. Fine as fivepence. Play, Appius fy Vir- ginia ; Sir W. Davenant, 8$ others. as an emperor. Sir Charles Sedley. as a lord. Fielding. as beaux. Ibid. as a butterfly. O'Keeffe. as feathers, ribbons, gold and silver, can make you. Duchess of Newcastle. as a rainbow. T. Dibdin. FIRM as virtue. W. Thompson. as truth. R. Bloomjield. as faith. Shakespear, T. Betterton. as the throne of Jove. So- mervile. as the fabled throne of Grecian Jove. W. Thompson. She has a mind firm and unbending as the laws of truth. Mrs. Corvley. as destiny. J. Shirley, M. Lee. as fate. Play, Love A-la-mode ; Otmay, fy others. Firm, resolved as fate. Pope. as the decrees of fate. M. A. Meilan. My promise firm as fate's decree shall stand. Ravenscroft. Firm as the poles of heaven. Massinger. Stand as firm as the celestial poles upon the shoulders of Atlas. Ibid. Firm as are the poles on which heaven lies. Play, Soliman fy Perseda. as are the poles that prop up heaven. Carlell. Endure firm as heaven. Watts. Firm as the heavens his throne shall last. Ibid. Stand more firm than Atlas. Quarks. My fortune firm as Atlas, will defy FI R the storm. Jephson. Firmer than old Atlas stands. N. Lee. Firm as earth. Chapman. as earth's fixed centre. Dekker. as the centre. Poole's Parnassus. as the solid base of the world rests on its own foundations. Akenside. Firm set as the earth's foundations. The Liberal. Firm as the pillars of the earth, and lasting. W. Thompson. as the mountain, round whose misty head the unharming tempest breaks. Southey. as moun- tains their foundations keep. Watts. Stand firm as a rocky mountain. Shakespear. Firm as fair Albion 'midst the raging main. /. Adams. as a rock. Jonson, Mead, fy others. as the solid rock. Play, Lady Alimony. Firm as a rock thy strength shall stand. Solomon, an Oratorio. As a rock stands fast against the surging waves still unremoveable, so shall my faith stand firm. Harington's Ariosto. Firm as a rock by surging tides unmoved. Hoole's Ariosto. as some rock amidst the bellowing flood. Ibid. Firm, as amidst the billows stands a rock. Poem, American War. as a rock, when billows lash its side. Joshua, a sacred Drama. as an isthmus. Thomson. as a Memphian pyramid. Glover. as adamant. Yarrington, Goff, 8f others. Bonds, firm as links of adamant. Thomas Gisborne. as a diamond. Play, Querer por Querer. Firm as the rock of diamonds, and as precious. Mead. as a stone. Sacred Script., Poole's Parnassus. as flint. Sir W. Scott. More firm than flinty field. Sir P. Sidney. Firm as marble. Duchess of New- castle, Mirandola, fy others. as a marble statue. Sir W. Scott. as a wall. Jonson, T. Killigrerv. as steel. Sir W. Scott. Firm and full of fire as steel and flint. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as brass. Chapman. as plates of brass. C. Churchill. as oaks on Ossa. Play, Muleasses the Turk. Stand firm as any post. Poems on State Affairs. Firm as the stately oak which fiercest hurricanes assault in vain, we '11 stand the driving tem- pest of their fury. W. Shirley. Firm (constant) as life unto your blood. Play, Hoffman's Tragedy. Firm (constant) as heat to fire. Chapman. Stand firm as the foot of resolution. Southern. as Cato. Thomson. as saints to virtue. C. Johnson. Firm, stony, as the lion's nerve. S. Johnson. FIT FITFUL as the raging sea. Play, Montalto. FIXED as fate. Glapthorne, Boyle Earl of Orrery, fy others. as the adamantine decrees of fate. Sir W. Scott as a star. W. Wordsworth. Stand fixed as the centre. Play, Valiant Welshman ; Durfey. Fixed like the centre to the massy globe. Banks, My resolution is fixed as is the centre. Tatham. Fixed as is the basis of the world. E. Young. Fixed and stedfast as the pillars which prop the sky. W. Thompson. Fixed like the northern pole. Poems, Forest of Varieties. Fixed and unchangeable, as the pole star in heaven. Play, Don Carlos, from Schiller. Fixed as the needle to its pole. Pix. as the mountain's solid base. Merrick. More fixed than mountains' roots. John Bidlake. Fixed as Atlas. Jane West. as a rock. T. Heywood, Young, fy others. as a rock, in constancy. W. Sampson. as the firm rock. T. Scott, in Dodsley's Collection. Fixed and firm as rocks of adamant. G. Powell. like a rock amidst a rapid flood. C. Hopkins. Fix'd as a rock (and as unmov'd she stood) that dares the storms, and ev'ry beating surge. J. Tracy. Fixed like a statue. Jane Wiseman, E. Young, fy others. as a statue to one spot. Sir W. Scott. like a statue of stone. Ibid. Why are thy eyes thus fix'd ? What means this posture ? Thou look'st a very statue of surprise, As if a lightning blast had dry'd thee up, And had not left thee moisture for a tear. B. Martyn. Fixed as a sentinel, all eye, all ear, all expectation of the com- ing foe. E. Young. as a mountain ash. Somervile. FLAME like fire. Harington. like pure ethereal fire. Banks. like sparkling fire. Play, Costly Whore. like a meteor. Po- etical Calendar. like a comet in its fiery course. /. Bird. like the day-star in the morning sky. W. Richardson. Flaming like the lamp of day. Sir W. Jones. as fire. H. Bradshaw, fy others. FLASH like lightning. Play, Thomas Stukeley ; R. Southey, $ others. like lightning from the cloud. Sir W. Scott. like lightning o'er the midnight sky. Ibid. Like lightning flashed, FLE before the approaching thunder. Theobald. As lightning gleams through midnight skies, so flash'd the fury of his eyes. J. B. Rogers. Flashing as the lightning's flames. Coluthus, by Meen. Flash like the diamond in the noon-tide sun. Southey. May these eyes that wanted fire to warm his heart, flash fierce as basilisks', and dart him dead. Southern. FLAT as a flounder. Beaumont Fletcher, E. Howard, fy others. as a pancake. /. Day. Play, London Chanticleers ; 8f others. FLEET as the wind. Butler, Dryden, $ others. Fleeter than the viewless wind. Southey. Fleeting as the restless wind. R. Green. Fleeting as the wavering wind. Spenser. Fleeter than the winds blown o'er the keen air'd mountain by the north. Thomson. than the mountain-wind. Sir W. Scott. Fleet as the air. Dryden' s Miscellany; Orpheus and Eury dice, an Opera. Fleeting as the air, or hours. Poem, Polindor fy Flostella. Fleeting as the bosom of the air. N. Lee. Fleet as Zephyr's pinion. T. Moore. Fleeter than the gale. Mickle's Lusiad. Fleeting as the gale. E. Young. Fleeting as the wind. Dr. Lisle. Fleeter than the gales that Boreas blows. Blackmore. More fleet than lightning. Thurlow. Fleet as the meteor o'er the desert falls. Campbell. like a dream. Fenton. Fleeting as a dream. Poetical Calendar. Fleet like a shadow. H. Blair. as a shade. Pitt. Fleeting as smoke. Doyne's Tasso. Fleet like morning mist. J. Hoole. as clouds, when fiercest tempests blow. Metrical Miscellany. as the dark clouds on a stormy day. 7. Bird. as eagles. Pope. as the eagles that do cut their way with airy plumes to their desired prey. Play, Youth's Comedy. as hawk. Sir W. Scott. as the vulture speeds to flags unfurled. T. Moore. Fleeter than the roe. Shakespear. Fleet as the mountain roe, when pressed by hounds. Gay. as mountain roes. Somervile, Boyd, fy others. as the roe of the desert. Ossian, as the lightly bound- ing roe. Metrical Miscellany. as fallow deer. Mickle. as forest deer. Sir W. Scott. as stags. G. E. Howard. Fleeter than the flying hind, or driven tempests, or the driving wind. Dryden. Fleet as the antelope for safety flies, when he be- FLE holds the dread hyena near. C. Fox. as the hare. Richard Griffith. Fleeter than thought. Shakespear, H. Donning, fy others. Fleet as a glance of the mind. W. Cowper. as fancy. C. DMin. FLEXIBLE as Indian cane. W. Cowper. as is the bladed grass. G. Powell. Play, Amintas. FLIT faster than the shuttles slide from weavers' hands. Syl- vester. Flitting like a ghost. Poem, Battle of Floddon. FLOCK like flies to a honey-crock. Spenser. Flock round about them, as a swarm of flies upon a birchen bough doth cluster. Ibid. FLORID. Where fresh health blooms o'er the cheek, florid as the vernal morn. Rolt. FLOURISH as blossoms in May. Plays, Trial of Treasure, $ Banished Duke. Flourishing like May. Dekker. Flourish as Flora in her pride. Marlowe. as a lily. Ecclesiasticus. like the morning flower in beauty's pride arrayed. Burns. like cedars of Libanus. E. Young. like a plant by gentle streams. Watts. like grass. Ibid. FLOW like a torrent. P. Francis. -like an inundation. Pix. like a stream. Ossian. like a continual stream. /. Taylor. like the pure crystal stream. R. Wilkinson. like a river. Watts. Flow as smoothly as a summer's flood. C. Hopkins. My temper, like a deep stream, flows on smooth and unruffled. T. Holcroft. Flow like a spring tide. Quarles. like a rush- ing tide. Sir Thomas Moore. Flow amply, like the undu- lating tide. Poem, Russian Prophecy. Flowing as the sea. Crown. as the full-tide sea. Duchess of Newcastle. Tears flowed like mountain rills. Byron. FLOWER like the green thorn of May. Home. FLUCTUATE like summer corn before the breeze. Southey. FLUENT as air. J. Shirley. as the sky-lark sings. Akenside. The theme is as fluent as the sea. A. Hill. FLY FLUSH as May. Shakespear. FLY swift as time. Marlowe. Fly with swifter wings than time. J. Smith. As swift shall post, as time itself can fly. Durfey. Fly like thought. Shakespear, Lilly, $ others. Fly away like a passing thought. Burns. Fly fast as day. Quarles. Fly swift as Aurora's wain o'er kindling skies. Aurelia, a Poem. like lightning. J. Shirley, Faulkland, $ others. Like light- ning let me furious fly. Henry Jones. Fly with swiftest flight, as lightning in tempestuous night. Play, Cupid's Whirligig. Fly like lightning to execute your commands. Play, Fatal Union. Not thunder flies more swiftly from Jove's arm, than I to execute what you command. W. Philips. Fly like the nimble journeys of the light. Dryden. Fly as swiftly as the wings of light. Sir W. Davenant. Fly like flash of flame. Sir W. Scott. like sky-rockets. Mrs. Coivley. like a rocket. R. B. Sheridan. Fly quick as a shooting star. Mirandola. like stars athwart the summer sty. Poem, Lay of the Scottish Fiddle. like meteors glancing o'er the troubled sky. Boyd's Dante. like a meteor at the midnight hour. Universal Ma- gazine. like winds. Parnell. like the northern wind. Marston. like a whirlwind. Ozell. Fly away as lightly as the wind. Spenser. like the swift-paced wind. R. Taylor. more swift than Zephyr's blast. Preston' 's App. Rhodius. Fly like mist before the wind. Ossian. like mist before the zephyr's breath. Sir W. Scott. Fly away, as grey mist be- fore the wind. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. like mists be- fore the morning sun. Quarles. like chaff before the wind. E. Ward, Watts. As empty chaff, when whirlwinds rise, before the sweeping tempest flies. Watts. Fly like chaff dispersed with chasing wind. Play, Youth's Comedy. Like tender blossoms in a forward spring, they fly before the hy- perborean breeze. Universal Magazine. Fly like the down of the thistle before the whirlwind. Sacred Script., Blair. The air-borne gossamer, urged by the summer's breath, flies not so fast as my desires. Play, Marriage Promise. Fly like dust before a whirlwind. Chapman. like smoke before FLY the rising tempest. Watts. as a cloud. Sacred Script. Fly swift as the clouds. M. Pilkington. like the light clouds of a summer's day. John Scott of Amwell. Fly as fast as cloud before the wind. Wyatt. like a cloud chased by the wind. J. Corye. Fly away like a shadow. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Quarles, fy others. She flies from love, as shadows from the light. J. Crown. Fly as a dream. Sacred Script., A. Philips, fy others. Fly light as an empty dream, or vagrant wind. Doyne's Tasso. Fly away as a vision of the night. Sacred Script. Fly like dreams before the morning ray. Sir W. Jones. Fly like an empty vision. C. Churchill. like the pictures of a morning dream. Akenside. like a dream, when man awakes. Watts. Like a dream, flying at the face of day. Arcadia, a Pastoral. Fly as fast as Iris, or Jove's Mercury. Marlowe. more swift than Venus drawn by doves. Banks. Fly away swift like Daphne. Langhorne. Fly swift as a maiden, who unawares a latent snake espies. Hoole's Ariosto. Fly away like a bird. Sacred Script. as an eagle. Ibid. as the eagle that hasteth to eat. Ibid. Fly faster than the Tropic bird. Grainger. Fly swift as a falcon through the yielding air. Hoole's Ariosto. like a flock of doves before a falcon's view. Spenser. Like a flock of doves who see the hawk appear, they turned and fled. Andromache, in Greek Tragic Theatre. Fly as doves do from a falcon. /. Taylor. as doth a fearful dove, when any noise doth scare her. Haringtons Ariosto. like timorous doves, what time some strange approaching noise they hear. Hook's Ariosto. like doves from eagles. Dryden. like timorous doves before the stooping eagle. L. Theobald. Quick as an eagle darting on his prey, Or lapwing skims on glancing plumes away, Or dove on rapid pinions sweeps the vale, Thus flew the ship before the rising gale. Ogilvie. Fly like lambs from wolves. Dryden. Behold them wing their rapid flight, as trembling birds from hungry vultures fly. Ajax, in Greek Tragic Theatre. Fly me as a trembling fawn would a tiger or a lion. Play, Win her and take her. Fly FOR like a youthful hart or roe. Watts. Fly fast as hind. Spenser. like the swift hind. Gay. Fly fast as roe-buck through the fen. Ibid. Like a young bounding roe that scuds it o'er the lawns to 'scape the hunter, so did she fly confused. Charles Marsh. Fly like harts before their swift pursuers. Quarles. Fly affrighted, as a hare before his hunters. Potter's Eschylus. like rats from sinking ships. Dunkin. as frighted pas- sengers from off the strand, when the tempestuous sea comes roaring on them. Young. Fly her, as a raven from the ark. Byron. Fly before them like the horizon. Burke. Fly quick as scandal. Cornwall, R. Bloomfield. Fly quick as an arrow. Southey. Fly from them like an arrow. S. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Literature. Shame shall fly like a poisoned arrow into his heart. South. Fly from temptation as they would from the regions of death, and the mansions of the damned. South. Fly as if your ghostly enemy had come before you in his most hideous and horrible form. W. Painter's Palace of Pleasure. Fly from me as from infection. Rawlins. Fly thee as they would a pestilence. Plays, Enchanted Wood, 8f Mont- alto. Fly thee like a noisome plague. R. Shiel. Fly from them as he would from the mouth of a cannon, or the breath of a pest-house. South. Fly from sin, as from the face of a serpent. Ecclesiasticus. Fly as from a scorpion. Marlowe. Fly thy clasping arm as 'twere the poisonous adder. Mason. Fly from him, as you would from a fierce basilisk. Play, Dif- ferent Widows. FOAMING like a mountain cataract. W. Wordsworth. FOLLOW her like a shadow. Mrs. Cooper. as shadow follows a beam of sunshine, when the clouds are drawing over the face of the sun. Sir W. Scott. Night followeth day as a shadow followeth a body. Wit's Commonwealth. FOND as a child. Otway. as pigeons. R. B. Sheridan. as two turtles. /. Worsdale. Fonder than ignorance. Shakespear. FORERUN, as lightning does the thunder. Dryden. as budding flowers forerun the blooming year. C. Beckingham. FOR FORGOTTEN as a dream. Sylvester. FORMAL as simple men in authority. Sir W. Davenant. FOUL as the fiends which fell from heaven's high towers. Dry- den. as sin. Poetical Calendar. as hell. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Sir W. Davenant, fy others. Your face looks fouler than a storm. Beaumont Fletcher. Her credit is more foul than speckled scandal, or black murder's soul. /. Day. Foul as infamy. T.Hull. as blotted pestilence. R. Shiel. as Vulcan's smithy. Shakespear. as ditch water. Tobin. FRAGILE. Weak and fragile like Arachne's line. Denham. FRAGRANT as the spring. Theobald. as the morn. Dods- ley's Collection, Scott of Amwell, fy others. as the balmy breath of morn. Thomson. Fragrant and cheerful as the rising day. Tate. as the summer air. Sir W. Jones. as the breathings of Arabian air. T. Moore. as eastern winds or garden breezes, that steal the sweets of roses in their flights. Banks. as the gentle wind when it passes over the heads of sweetest flowers. Thomas Bayly's Wall-corner. Breath, more fragrant than Arabia's gale. Ann Yearsley. Fragrant as the dew of May. Garth. as the violet as it blooms. Poetical Calendar. as zephyr's breath cast on a bank of sum- mer's violets. Play, Costly Whore. Fragrant and precious as the prime virgins of the spring ; the violets, when they do first display their early beauties, till all the winds in love do grow contentious which from their lips should ravish the first kisses. Chapman. More fragrant than violet buds fresh opening to the morning's eye. C. Bullock. than a rose. E. Ward. Fra- grant as the damask rose. Ramsay. as the blowing rose. Jacob. as the morning rose. Chapman. as roses newly sprung. James Hogg. as roses fresh with early bloom, that from their native stalk dispense perfume. Sir W. Jones. as rose water. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Literature. as mountain thyme. Poetical Calendar. More fragrant than the sweet carnation. E. Ward. Fragrant as the lily's perfume. Mrs. Brooke. More fragrant than fresh odours shed from FRE lily's perfumed breath, or scent of vernal rose. Sotheby's Obe- ron. Fragrant as the flower-scented heath at the daivning of day. Mrs. Brooke. as the breath of flowers. W. Thompson. as the hawthorn in bloom. Mrs. Brooke. Fragrant and blooming as the May drest thorn. Jane West. as the blos- soms of May. Mrs. Brooke. More fragrant and fair than sweet breathing blossoms. M. Pilkington. Fragrant as mea- dow flowers in triumphant June. Jordan. as the flower of the Amra just opened by a bee. T. Moore. as jasmine. S. Rous- seau s Flowers of Persian Literature. as the phoenix' nest. Play, Triumphs of Virtue, Not the phcenix in his death, Nor those banks where vi'lets grow, And Arabian winds still blow, Yield a perfume like her breath. Habington. More fragrant than Sabaean spice. Aurelia, a Poem. than Arabia sacrificed, and all her spicy mountains in a flame. E. Young. than all the sweets of Arabia. T. Herbert. Fragrant as Eastern groves. Dryden. More fragrant than the smell of new-mown hay. W. Ward's Gentle Shepherd. FRAIL as fair mortality. Byron. as the flower. E. Young. as dew upon the flower. Campbell. as the leaf in autumn's yellow bower. Ibid. as the clouds of sunset. Montgomery. as dust in the wind. Campbell. as is the film upon the x thorn, whose thin web stretches o'er the vale. Poem, Margaret oJAnjou. FRANK and merry as Mirth herself. Play, Merry Devil of Edmonton. FRANTIC as the tiger o'er his prey. Massinger. FREE as liberty. Savage; The Farm-house, a Farce. as thought. Play, Orgula; C. Butler, fy others. Free and unconfined as thought. M. Bladen. as virtue. Randolph. as bending an- gels. Shakespear. as innocence. /. Shirley. as first inno- cence. Otway. as innocence can make me. A. Hill. Free of offence like cherubs in a state of innocence. E. Ward. Free from guilt as innocence itself. May. Free from shame FRE as truth's fair nakedness. Sir W. Davenant. Free as truth is from falsehood, or sanctity from stain. Middleton. as nature. Thomson. as nature's morn. W. S. Landor. as nature first made man. Dryden. as the sun. Chapman, Banks. Free and general as the sun. Play, Edward the Third. as the sun's rays. T. Heynood. as light. A. Bushe, Banks, < others. as the vital breeze, or light of heaven. Akenside. Free and faithful as light. Coffey. as air. N. Field, Beaumont fy Fletcher, fy others. as the common air. Thomson. as ele- mental air. Tate. as the air he breathes. Glapthorne, Den- ham. Free and unconfined as air, Miscellany of Poems, by J. Husbands, Broome. Walk more free than the unlimited air. Play, Christmas Ordinary. Free as mountain air. W. Hem- mings, J. Dillon. as the vagrant air. G. Keate. Free as the air, and transient as its blast. W. Mason. as the wind. Shakespear, Duchess of Newcastle, Sf others. as mountain winds. Shakespear, Byron, others. Walk free as winds that pass unseen. Sir W. Davenant. Free as seas, or wind. Pope. as fire, or wind. Watts. as the gale. Samuel Barn- ford. as fragrant gales that breathe o'er laughing lawns and beds of roses sweet. Paul Hiffernan. as the zephyr's wing. Garrick. as ocean's spray. Byron. as the bound- less wave. Landon. as a bird. R. Bloomjield. as the birds of air. P. Pindar. as the linnet's wing. Shenstone. as birds let loose into the air. Sir W. Davenant. as a bird on a tree. C. Dibdin. as the birds that sport in yonder boughs. H. Boyd. As a falcon free, that soareth in the air. Surrey. Free as roving lions. N. Lee. as flowers in meads and plains. Behn. as fountain, air, or flower. W. Cartwright. as fate. T. Heywood. as emperors. Marston. As shepherds free on mountain heath. R. Bloomjield. Free as rivers that are got to sea. Sir W. Davenant. as fish that glide through the deep. T. Killigrew. as light, air, fire, water. Montgomery. as an open house at Christmas. Vanbrugh. FREEZE like a wind broke from the icy prison of the North. Rawlins. FRE FRESH as day. Spenser, Garth. as the early day. W. Cart- wright, Pope, fy others. as the bright summer's day. Chaucer. as the dawning light. Milton. as the rising dawn. A$O- mervih. as summer's dawn. Ramsay. as the morn. Pope ; Play, Belisarius, lj Philips. as morning. Giles Fletcher, Durfey, fy others. as blushing morn. Poems, Forest of Va- rieties. As Aurora's blushing morn. Garth. As Aurora be- fore the rising sun. Play, Amorous Old Woman. as the breath of morn. P. Pindar. as the spring. Fountain ; Play, Romulus fy Hers'dia, fy others. as the blooming spring. Ro- mulus fy Hersilia. Fresh and blooming as the youthful spring. R. Barford. as the pride of spring. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Fresh, sweet, and pleasant as the spring. Duchess of New- castle. Fresh and delightful as the chequered spring. Play, Muleasses the Turk. Fresh as the spring, and fragrant as its flowers. N. Rone. A beauty, fresh and promising as spring. Sir W. Davenant. Beauty, fresh as the new spring's, when wan- ton Phoebus mounts his burnished chariot early to salute her, and kiss dew from her cheeks. Nabbs. Fresh as April. Ca- ren<. as May. Chaucer, Spenser, fy others. Fresh and blithe as May. John Keefe. as the month of May. Chaucer, Lilly, fy others. Fresh and youthful as the month of May. L. Bar- rey. Fresh and blooming as the month of May. Pope. as the lovely form of youthful May. Sotheby's Oberon. as mea- dow in a morn of May. Lilly. as a morning in May. The Footman, an Opera. Fresh and jocund as the breast of May. Marston. Fresher than the May with flowers new. Chaucer. Than May herself in blossoms new. Dryden. Fresh as an April blossom. R. Shlel. as the lively verdure of the spring. Francis North. Fresh and green and sweet as Flora. Her- rick. as Flora in her prime. Spenser. Fresher than the morning dew. Tatham. Fresh as morning's dew distilled on flowers. Shakespear. Fresher than the dew that early sits on roses. Durfey. Fresh as the dew that drops from morning's wings. T. Moore. as the dew that drops from bounteous hea- ven in the morning, to make the shadowy bank pregnant with G FRE violets. Habington. as any flower. Plays, Marriage of Wit 8f Science, Fair Em, Marriage Broker, ty others. Fresh and fair as summer flowers spring from their winter bed. Beau- mont's Psyche. as May flowers. Fankes as May rose. Syl- vester. as flowers in May. Play, Mundus fy Infans ; Skelton, fy others. as flowers in the month of May. Lidgate. as flower .of May. Spenser, Gay. fresh and gay as the flowers in May. Dryden's Miscellany, L. Macnally. Fresh and flourishing as the flowers in May. L. Wager. as the flower amid the sunny showers of May. M. Bruce. as branch in May. Chaucer. as flowers in June. D. Belchier. as flowers in meadow green do grow, when morning dew upon their leaves doth light. Spenser. More fresh than flowery meads. G. Sandys. Fresh as a bloom that newly kissed the sun, adorned with pearly drops flung from the hand of the rose-fingered morn. Rawlins. as the floweret opening on the morn, whose leaves bright drops of liquid pearl adorn. Beattic. as breath- ing flowers sweet smelling in the morning dew. W. Hamilton. More fresh and fair than blossoms which the morning air steals perfume from. R. Lloyd, Arcadia. Fresh as the balm. J. Ford. as the buds of roses. T. Middleton. as a rose- bud newly blown. Somervile. as a rose. Chaucer, Durfey, fy others. Fresh and ruddy as a rose. Play, Spanish Bawd. as roses blown. Ramsay. as roses newly blown. E. Ward. as morning rose. Spenser. Play, Faithful Shepherd, fy others. Fresher than the maiden rose. Peaps. Fresh as the rose in the gay dewy morning. Burns. Fresher than the sum- mer's dewy rose. Salmagundy. Her form was fresher than the morning rose, when the dew wets its leaves. Thomson. Fresher than roses dipped in fragrant dew. Mrs. S. Gunning. Fresher and sweeter than a rose new blown. Fanshaw. Fresh as a new-blown rose. Mr. Tom's Accomplished Maid. Fresh and fragrant as a new-blown rose. Theophilus Gib- ber. as the vernal rose. Dr. Johnson. as a rose in May. C. Molloy. as a rose in June. Reuben Bourne. as da- mask rose. Warner, in England's Parnassus. A colour fresh FRU as damask rose. Warner's Albion's England. Fresh and fragrant as the Fleur de luce. Spenser. Fresh and fine as a daisy. Cumberland. as daffodil, that in a garden grows. Sylvester. Fresh and verdant as the garden of Eden. E. Irving. as the verdant olive. Merrick. Fresh as the leaf his name shall live. Watts. Fresher than green grass. Fraunce. Fresh as air. Glapthorne, H. Vaughan, fy others. as the gales of dawn. J. Dillon. as the zephyr on the hill. Fawkes. Fresh and gay, like infant nature. C. Davenant. Fresh as childhood. Sacred Script. as youth. Duke of Newcastle. Feel fresh, as in youth's fair morning. Southey. Fresh as the Hours. H. Vaughan. Fresher than Hebe, or the rosy Hours. Harriet Donning. Fresh as Dian's visage. Shakespear. as the wave. Thurlon. as falcon coming out of mew. Chaucer. As eagle fresh out of the ocean wave. Spenser. Go attire yourself fresh as a bridegroom when he meets his bride. Dekker. Fresh as a new minted sixpence. Marston. FRESHEN like drooping flowers in the heat of summer, after a hastening shower. W. Taverner, FRET like a chafed lion. Beaumont Fletcher. like a gummed velvet. Shakespear like a gummed silk. J. Baillte. FRIGHTFUL as the serpent's hiss. Shakespear. Frightful to me, as a judge to a criminal upon passing sentence of death. W. Taverner. FRISK like a goat. /. Shirley. FRIVOLOUS as gamesters' oaths. Dilke. FROLICK, as the hunters in the chase of savage beasts, amid the desert woods. Marlome. FRO WARD as children suddenly waked. Sir W. Davenant. FROZEN. More frozen than the Alps. John Fletcher. FRUITFUL as the free elements. Shakespear. as the genial spring. N. Cotton. as autumn. Fountain. as the full-grown year. Poem, Progress of Wit. as the fertile earth. Duchess of G2 FUG Newcastle. as the Nile. Dryden. as the meads of Paradise. Play, Three English Brothers. as the vine. Sir W. Davenant. as the swelling vine. C. Cotton. FUGITIVE as time himself. Sir W. Scott. as wind. Thomas Gent, FULL. As full of spirit as the month of May. Shalcespear. Full of charms, as nature in the spring is rich in blossoms. R. Shiel. Full of beauty, as a rose is of sweetness. Play, Rape upon Rape. I am as full of humour as an April day of variety. T. Heywood. She was full of virtues, as the milky way upon a frozen night is thick with stars. R. Shiel. As full of sorrows, as a sea of sands. Shakespear. My mouth was as full of wit, as the sea of water. Durfey. Full of dullness, as an egg is full of meat. Fielding. Full of business, as an egg is full of meat. G. Colman jun. Full as an egg. Gay. as an egg is of meat. W. Dames. as Westminster-hall the last day of Term. Fielding. FULSOME as howling after music. Shakespear. FURIOUS as a whirlwind. A. Hill. as Libyan whirlwinds. C. Gibber. as the wind. Otway. as when Boreas tears the shat- tered crags from off the mountain cliffs. Doyne's Tasso. as boisterous winds that have their prison broke, roar on a forest. Sylvester. as a flame of fire. G. Townsend. as stormy bil- lows rush against a rock. Sylvester. as the sweeping wave. Byron. as heaven's sulphury flash against proud mountains' surly brows doth dash. Sylvester. as a bear bereaved of her whelps. Sacred Script. as a tiger. /. Corey. Wild and fu- rious, like a raging tiger. Lidgate. Furious as an enraged tiger. II Trionfo delta Costanza. Furious like a lion. Lidgate. G. GABBLE like a goose. Dryden. GAPE as the oyster for the tide. Jonson. like oysters. Beau- GAY mont Sf Fletcher. like the cracks of earth when dried to sum- mer dust. Byron. GATHER like a snow-ball. Webster, Baron, 8f others. like a rolling snow-ball. Play, Abdicated Prince. like a tide. Pitt. In multitudes gathering like waves on the strand. Landon. Gather as they run, like growing water. Byron. GAUDY as the summer. J. Shirley. as a tulip. Durfey. as peacocks. Burgoyne, Cumberland. GAUNT as famished wolves. Chapman. as a grave. Shake- spear. GAY as the morn. Porteus. as nature at the morning smile. Chatterton. as the vernal morning, when rosy Phoebus woos the sprightly May. Miss Porden. Gay and youthful as a new summer's morn. Behn. Gay as morning blushing at the gate of day. W. Richardson. More gay than light. J. Ford, Dry- den's Miscellany, fy others. than morning light. Garth. Gay as the streaks that stain the gaudy bow. Madan's laudatory verses on Pope. as the spring. T. Yalden, in Dryden's Mis- cellany; Durfey, fy others. as the gilded summer sky. Burns. Gay and teeming as the summer. Fielding. Gay and buxom as a summer's day. John Clare. Gay and pleasant as the month of June. Centlivre. as heaven. Chaucer. Gay and entertaining as the golden beams of the rich planet that adorns the day. L. Theobald. Make nature smile as gay, as at first she did on her creation day. Durfey. Gay is her smile as those the Queen of love darts on the Graces in her court above. Hayley. as the bird. Poem, Paradise of Coquettes. as a lark. G. Colmanjun., O'Keeffe, fy others. as linnets. Shen- stone. as a peacock. Chaucer. as a goldfinch. Sir W. Scott. More gay and artless than the birds that sing their tuneful son- nets on the leafy spray. Harriet Falconer. Gay as a lamb in a spring morning. Sir W. Scott. as the roe-buck springing o'er the vale. Jane West. as the gilded fly, that idly wanders in the noon-tide air. Edinburgh Collection, 1767. Gaily as the summer fly. Cornwall. More gay than butterflies. Oding- G AZ sells, Barham Livius. Gay as the zephyrs of summer. M. G. Lewis. as Flora. Donne, R. Lloyd. More elegant and gay than Flora blooming in a morn of May. J. Smith. Gay as gardens in the month of May. /. Walton. Gay and bloom- ing as the garden of Eden. Elizabeth Carter, in the Rambler. as Paradise, when first its sweetness bloomed. Play, Woman s Conquest, by E. Howard. as Elysium. Play, Necromancer. as a tulip. Lacy. Gayer than tulips in the spring. Shadwell. Gay and beautiful like a flower in the spring. W. Sherlock. as youth. T. Holcroft. as a bride. Play, The Mistakes ; Odingsells. as a bridegroom. Blackmore, Joseph Fawcet, fy others. as young bridegrooms. C.Johnson. as mirth. Savage. More gay than glittering gold. R. Southey. GAZE like startled deer. Sir W. Scott. Stand at gaze, as do the herds of deer at some strange sight. T. Heynood. With such insatiate raptures, mothers gaze upon their darling in- fants, when they see the smiling babes from pangs of death relieved. Pix. GENERAL as the sun. Play, Edward the Third. as the day. C. Churchill. as the air. Colman, Burke, fy others. GENEROUS as a prince. Centlivre, Garrick, fy others. as spring dews that bless the glad ground. Sir W. Scott. GENTLE and kind as sympathizing nature. Otway. as nature in its infancy. Settle. as evening. A. Marcel. as the golden star of eve. Akenside. She plays gentle as star-beams on the midnight seas. Watts. Gentler than light. A. Cowley. Gentle as Cynthia's silver beam. Ode to Fancy. as the morn. Poems on State Affairs, N. Lee, fy others. as a morn of May. The Liberal. as the yielding air. Dodsley's Collection. as soft summer airs. W. Cowper. as winds, when Zephyr blows. B. Booth. as the breath of even. W. Richardson. as the brush- ing wind runs o'er the gentler flowers. Jonson. as winds that stir the groves of spring. Doyne's Tasso. Gentle and smooth as water when no wind breathes on it. Marmion. as the gale which moves the grass. Ossian. as the gale, whose breath per- GEN fumes anew the blossomed vale. A. Servard. Gentler than gales that wave their musky wings in Aden's aromatic vales. W. Richardson. Gentle in peace as the gale of spring, fierce in war as the mountain storm. Ossian. as the gale of spring. W. Richardson. as the undisturbed air. Behn. as the whispering gale. Mickle. as the southern gale. /. Hogg. Each word is gentle as a western breeze that fans the infant bosom of the spring. Southern. Gentle as breeze that but whispers and dies. Sir W. Scott. as the twilight breeze. Mary Robinson. as the breeze that sighs at evening hour, on the soft bosom of some folding flower. Langhorne. as the halcyon breeze sent from the evening sea, to bless the shore after the fervours of a tropic noon. Montgomery. Voice, gentle as the breeze that plays in the evening among the spices of Sabaea. Dr. Johnson, as the summer's breeze. Glover. as the summer's breeze that mildly whispers. Dry den. as Zephyrs blowing below the violet, not moving its sweet head. Shakespear, R. Berenger. Gentle and sweet as vernal Zephyr blows, fanning the lily or the blooming rose. E, Young. as the breath of Zephyrus. A. Comley. Her temper is gentle as the zephyr's breath. Play, Selima 8f Azor. Gentle as the zephyr, yet blithe as the leaf that dances in its eddy. Morton. as the murmur of a sigh. Poem, Abelard to Eloisa. as dew. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as the dews of heaven. W. Richardson. as falling dew. Cooke's Hesiod. as descending dews. W. Thompson. Gently as dews descend, or slumbers creep. N. Rome. Gently as falls the balmy dew from heaven. Ibid. Gently as evening dews shut up the rose. Play, Romulus fy Hersilia. Gentle as the dews which evening sheds o'er expiring day. M. G. Lewis. as evening dews descending on the flowery vale. W. Richardson. Thy nature is as gentle as morning dew just melting into air. Fountain. Like the fresh leaf of the rose, thy nature is gentleness. S. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Literature. Gentle as dews at even-tide. C. Churchill. Caress you gently as the morning dew falls on the opening rose, or the fleece of snow on the bosom of the cold vale. Play, Win her and take her. Gentle as sum- GH A mer's soft descending rains. Mrs. S. Gunning. as flakes of feathered snow descend. Poetical Calendar. Gentle, pure, and sweet as breath of evening flowers. Porteus. as the perfume of flowers. Sturm. as rising incense. Thompson, in Dodsley's Col- lection. as a lamb. Shakespear ; Play, Shoemaker's Holiday ; fy others. as the fleecy lamb. A. Bicknell. as the unweaned lamb. R. B. Sheridan. Gentle and patient as a lamb. C. Dib- din. as a dove. C. Trotter, Fielding, fy others. as the gall- less dove. Howard fy Dryden's Indian Queen. as is the ten- der dove. J. Stagg. as the harmless dove. W. Hamilton. Gentle and soft as the dove. Poem, Sorrows of Love. as kids that suck their milky dams. Sir Thomas Moore. Gentle and soft as notes of dying swans. Baron. like a goddess. Cockain. as a new-born child. C. Churchill. as an infant child. W. Wordsworth. as innocence. W. Rose. as blooming innocence. R. Hurst. as a maid. The Liberal. as a happy lover's sigh. Settle. as a love-sick youth, when his dear conqueress sighs a hope into him. Behn. as bridal smiles. Sir W. Davenant Gentle as the touch that falls on serenader's moon-lit instru- ment. Cornwall. Words, gentler far than those that holy priests do speak to dying saints. Fountain. Gently as sleep the weary lids invades. Mickle. Gentle as hermits sleeping in their mossy cells, lulled by the fall of waters. W. Thompson. How gentle is his sleep ! Such always is the sleep of innocence in youth or age. B. Martyn. Gentle as a glove. Congreve. GHASTLIER than death. Southey. GIDDY as a goose. Burgoyne. GLAD as the wrecked swimmer, when he feels the land. T. Hey- rvood. Gladly as the parched earth drinks health out of the cup of heaven. S. Rowley. Gladden like the spring. Pasquin. Gladdening as day. Ibid, GLANCE like lightning. Sir W. Scott, J. Bird. like a flash of lightning. Play, Portsmouth Heiress. like a falling star. Byron. like a meteor. Sir W. Scott. like sudden gleams that glow through autumn clouds. T. Moore. A keener glance darts GLI not the hawk, when from the feathered tribe he marks his vic- tim. Southey. GLARING as the noon-tide sun. E. Young. Glaring and evi- dent as the sun shining at noon-day. Tillotson. Glaring and gay as falling Lucifer. Pomfret. His vengeful eye, fierce as a fiery vapour, glared on the foe. /. Bird. GLEAM like an orient star. Sir W. Jones. like lightning 'midst a thunder cloud. James Campbell. like broken moon-light rippling on the stream. Montgomery. Gleam ruddy, like the beacon's light. Sir W. Scott. like the diamond dew. London. like gold. Southey. GLIB. A tongue glib as oil. Durfey. GLIDE as smoothly as a Parthian shaft. Kyd. Glide, like a shooting exhalation, out of their sight. Chapman. Glide away like a shadow. R. Greene. Glide light as the breath of open- ing morn o'er beds of unsunn'd violets borne. Poem, Illusions of Fancy. Glide away as gentle streams. C. Johnson. GLIMMER like faint stars in a twilight sky. Scott of Amwell. like a meteor. S. Rogers. like dying tapers. Pix. GLISTER like the sun. Play, Caesar s Revenge ; 'N. Richards. like the summer's sun. Peek. like the palace of the sun. Play, Battle of Alcaza. Glistering as bright as Phoebus orient. A. Barclay. Glistering as the sun. G. Peele. like a star. T. Hcynood, South, fy others. like gold. Devices of sundry Gentlemen. Glistering as gold bright. Barclay. GLITTER like a star. Chapman, Banks, fy others. like a bright starry planet. Palace of Pleasure, by William Painter. like a starry sky. W. Wordsnorth. like a sun-beam. Sotheby's Oberon. like a flame. Chapman. like a gem. Akenside. like burnished gold. Southey. like crescents over a Turk's pavilion. Byron. like morning dew. Poem, Modern Manners. as a glow-worm, W. Tennant. GLITTERING as Phoebus. H. Bradshaiv.Mke the sun. Sir W. Scott. as when suns by thousands shine in orbs of dew. GLO Parnell. like crystal glass. Spenser. like a star. Dryden. like a refulgent star. Blackmore. like the morning star. Burke. like the moon's bright rays, or that clear silver path the milk-white way, that in Olympus leads to Jove's high court. G. Peele. GLOOMY as night. Milton, Pope, fy others. as a November evening. Play, Right fy Wrong. as death. Mr. May's King Asa. as hell. G. Townsend. as the grave. G. Croly. like the gathering of clouds. Ossian. as the bursting storm, when low'ring clouds autumnal skies deform. Miss Porden. Gloomy and uncomfortable as a surly winter's day without sunshine. John Baillie. GLORIOUS as the sun. Randolph, Marmion, fy others. as the rising sun. South. as the sun at noon. Otway. More glori- ous than the noon-day sun. R. Barford. like the sun in his meridian. Davenport. Glorious and charming as the mid-day's sun. Be/in. Glorious he stood as a bright sun set amid the stars. Lidgate. Glorious as the western sun. Play, Timoleon. like the setting sun. Crown. as the summer sun sets in the full refulgence of his ray. The Cossack, by R. Ely. as the eye of heaven. A. Conley. as the day. M. Stevenson, Doyne's Tasso. Glorious and light as day. C. Cotton. as mid-day. Beaumont fy Fletcher, T. Betterton. as the noon. Watts. as the light. W. Cartwright. as when the pure and first created light broke through the chaos. Suckling. as the morn. So- mervile. as a summer morn. W. Tennant. as the morning washed with dew. Play, Taming of a Shretv. as the morning ray. Beaumont's Psyche. Glorious to the view, as young Au- rora decked with pearly dew. Countess of Winchilsea. More glorious than the bright empress of the ruddy morn when early Titan rises. Durfey. as the morning star in the midst of a cloud. Sacred Script. as the moon at the full. Ibid. as the rainbow giving light in the bright clouds. Ibid. as the spring. Massinger. as the flower of roses in the spring of the year. Sacred Script. as unclouded May. Tobin. as a diamond GR A richly set. Byron. More glorious than the Indian gem. John Gait. Glorious as Mars. Sir W. Davenant. He was as the morning star in the midst of a cloud, and as the moon at the full ; as the sun shining upon the temple of the Most High, and as a rainbow giving light in the bright clouds. Ecclesias- ticus. GLOW like summer suns. Campbell. like the sun with pure unwearied lustre. Merry. like burning noon. Watts. Glow- ing as the summer blaze at noon. W. Thompson. like heaven. T. Moore. Glowing like a flame. Zimri, an Oratorio. like the morning star. Ossian. like morn when spring's soft ze- phyr blows. Polwhele's Theocritus. like radiant morn when Sol's bright rays his blushing east adorn. Charlotte Brookes' Relicjues of Irish Poetry. Glow as with the blushes of an evening sky. Akenside. Glowing as the vestals' holy fires. W. Thompson. Glow like a volcano. Sir W. Scott. as a fiery oven. Watts. like a fiery spark. Sir W. Scott. like a fiery brand. Ibid. like fire brands. Vathek. like steel upon the anvil. Sir W. Scott. GOLDEN as the sun. /. Ford. GORGEOUS as the sun at midsummer. Shakespear. GRACEFUL as the Queen of love. G. Townsend. as Dian when she draws her bow. Byron. Not with more grace the nectar'd cup is given by rose-lipp'd Hebe to the Lord of Hea- ven. Hayley. One there was like orient morn, and graceful as of goddess born. Cottle's Icelandic Poetry. GRACIOUS as the morning star of heaven. Play, Friar Bacon. GRADUAL and silent as the extension of evening shadows. Dr. Johnson. GRATEFUL as May. Lovibond. as the rosy month of May. W. Thompson. as the dawn of day. N. Rone. as sun-shine to the sportive lambs. Jago. To me more grateful than the orb of day crowned with the glories of celestial light. C. Fox. Grateful as when Titan's golden beam first dawns upon the GR A new-recovered sight of one long fated to the dreary glooms of darkness. /. G. Cooper. as (at noon's sultry hour) the grot where trickling dews congeal. Salmagundy. as fanning gales to fainting swains. Gay. as dews to blossoms. W. Thompson. as blossoms to the bee. Ibid. Tear-drops, more grateful than the morning dew on dying plants. C. Lennox. Grateful as the silver drops of kindly rain to drooping plants and thirsty fields. Ibid. as the thunder's cloud in summer's burning sea- son, that brings hope of wonted rain. Doyne's Tasso. as fall- ing floods to lovesick minds. Gay. as the tuneful linnet's warbling notes to the shepherd. W. Thompson. as the flower that pays with sweets the genial summer's bounty. G. Keate. No external sensation is so grateful to the body, as the touch of the soft cheeks of one's own child. Specimens of Hindoo Li- terature, by N. E. Klndersley. GRAVE as a judge. Addlson, Colman. Talk gravely as a judge. E. Ward. Speak as gravely as a justice of peace. Play, Shoemaker s Holiday. Grave as a tetrarch. Play, Game of Chess. as an owl. Somervlle. Look grave as an owl in a barn. Farquhar. Grave as an old abbess. Sir W. Davenant. Long, grave, and sullen as a mourning cloak. Ibid. Look as grave and thoughtful as rich mourners. Ibid. GREAT as Jove. Gay. as a God. Pope. as an emperor. Gay. as a king. Durfey, E. Ward, fy others. as Philip's victor son. Prior. Greater than a monarch on his throne. Dryden. Great and commanding as the breath of kings. N. Rome. as a duchess. Somervlle. Greater than fame. Duke of Guise, by Dryden fy Lee. GREEDY as the grave. Cumberland. as wolves. Otnay. as kites. A. Marvel. Greedy of it as a cat is of a dish of milk. Tatham. Greedier than the sea. South. Greedily as bees suck sweetness from the fragrant stock of Flora's early bounty. Tatham. GREEN as spring. Hunt. as a laurel. Chaucer, Wyatt. as the bay-tree. Marmlon, T. Shadwell, $ others. as grass. GUI Gascoigne, Common Prayer Book, < others. as the spring grass in a sunny shower. Southey. as the leaf. Watts. as a leek. Chaucer, Gascoigne, $ others. as Cambrian leek. Bre- val. as May. T.Shadwell. as the salt sea billows. W. Words- north. Leaves, green as the sea. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. Green as gall. Chaucer. as emeralds. T. Moore. No emerald greener ever was. H. Peacham. GREY as the morning's eye. F. Beaumont. as January. Tom- kls. as glass. Chaucer, Gascoigne, $ others. as a goose. Chaucer, fy others. as a falcon. Chaucer. as a badger. P. Pindar. GRIEVE like Niobe. Shakespear. GRIEVOUS as for one to read over his debts when he is not able to pay them. South. as for a bankrupt to examine and look into his accounts, which at the same time that they ac- quaint, must needs also upbraid him with his condition. Ibid. More grievous than the pains of death. Home. GRIM as hell. Shakespear. as voracious wolves. Pope. More grim than death. Quarles, Centlivre. GRIZZLED as a silver-haired rabbit. Sir Chas. Sedley. GROSS as a mountain. Shakespear. as earth. Ibid. Fools, as gross as ignorance made drunk. Ibid. GROW like Hydra's heads. Shakespear. as the vine. Sacred Script. as the lily. Ibid. The family grew like an oak on the mountain, which meeteth the wind with its lofty head. Ossian. GRUNTING like a hog. J. Taylor. GUIDE. I will guide your tottering steps as prosperous gales assist the voyage of the bark. Phoenician Damsels, in Greek Tragic Theatre. GUILEFUL as the hunter's snare. S. Rousseau's Flowers of Persian Literature. GUILELESS as the dews of dawn. T. Moore. GUILTLESS as innocence. Gomersal. as an infant's dreams. Settle. HAL H HALLOWED as is Heaven's self. W. Mason. HANDSOME as an angel. Southern, Fielding, <$ others. as a goddess. Behn. as a cherubin. Centlivre, James Wild,. as Venus. /. Mottley. as Adonis. Footers Comic Theatre. as Hercules ere his first labour. Byron. as a peach-tree in blos- som. T. Morton. HANG the head, as flowers with frost, or grass beat down with storms. Shakespear, like bending lilies overcharged with rain. Duke. like a white poppy sinking on the plain, whose heavy head is overcharged with rain. Dryden. My virgin head hung like the poppy charged with too much moisture. Play, Codrus. as full-blown poppies overcharged with rain decline the head. Pope. with head declined like a fair flower sur- charged with dew she weeps. Milton. as with ungentle showers the rose o'ercharged with wet declines her head. C. Cotton. Hang thy head down like a violet full of the morning dew. Beaumont fy Fletcher. Hang down their heads like full- eared corn. Suckling. like a columbine. Marston. like a lily. J. Crown, in Dryden's Miscellany. Like a drooping lily hung his head. P. Pindar. She like a lilly nipped by winter's frost hangs down her lovely head. Play, The Spaniards. So a fine tulip when o'ercharg'd with rain, melts and dissolves, not able to sustain the weight of falling showers, hangs down its head. Play, Alarbas. Hang like flax on a distaff. Shake- spear. Hang together like a swarm of bees. The Liberal. Like a drowning wretch will I hang upon you. Play, Coffee- house. Hang heavy o'er him like a gathered cloud. /. Reed. Grief on her lovely aspect hangs like a cloud upon the morn- ing's brow, and shines with lustre borrowed from her beauties. Theobald. HAPPILY as the bees that hive their sweets. Cornwall. HAPPY as a god. A. Hill. as the blest above. Lansdowne. as the blest in Paradise. Play, The Robbers. as angels. Farce, H A R Who fares best. as Heaven's angels. Sylvester. as a king. Play, Guy Earl of Warwick; Gay, fy others. as a queen. Lansdowne. as a prince. Play, The Mistakes ; M. P. Andrews, 8$ others. as a bird. Wordsworth. as birds in their bowers. Ibid. Happy and faithful as two turtle doves. Mrs. Coroley. as the day is long. Garrick, Murphy, fy others. as a lawyer in Term time, or a physician in November. T. Holcroft. She seemed as happy as a wave that dances on the sea. W. Words- worth. HARD as a stone. Chaucer, Lidgate, Sf others. as the rocky stone. Poole's Parnassus. as a piece of the nether mill-stone. Sacred Script. Hard and cold as stone. Poems, Forest of Va- rieties. as marble. Sylvester, Duchess of Newcastle, fy others. Harder than Egyptian marble. Chapman. Hard as marble rocks. J.Taylor. Harder than a rock. Sacred Script., Shake- spear, <$ others. than rocky hills. Spenser. Hard as stony rocks. Glapthorne. as the Scythian rock. Poole's Parnassus. Their breasts are harder than the Scythian rocks. E. Heywood. Hard as an adamant. Sacred Script., Bancroft, 8f others. as rocks of adamant. Marmion, Habington, fy others. Hearts more hard than adamantine rocks. /. Taylor. Hard as a dia- mond. Chaucer. Heart, hardened as the diamond. W. Pain- ter's Palace of Pleasure. Hard as flint. Sacred Script., A. Bar- clay, fy others. as fire-engendering flint. Poole's Parnassus. More hard than Idumean flints on sun-burnt plains. A. Hill. than flint, or marble stone. A. Barclay. than flint, or dia- mond. W. Painter's Palace of Pleasure. than marble, flint, or diamonds. Poetical Calendar. Hard and smooth as glass. T. Moore. as steel. Lidgate, Barclay, fy others. Harder than steel, or adamant. G. Peele. as iron. Sandys, Fountain, < others. as iron, or steel. Marlowe. as solid brass. Poole's Parnassus. Harder than oak. G. Sandys. Hard as the palm of ploughman. Shakespear. Hard and unfeeling as a tyrant's heart. Play, TheRevolution. as the heart of unrelenting tyrants. Poole's Parnassus. Hard (difficult) as for a camel to thread the postern of a needle's eye. Shakespear. as to paint echo to H AR the sight. Swift. as the Gordian knot. Shakespear. as to tell the sands, or count the stars. Spenser. as to count the sands in Euphrates. Sylvester. as to count the waves. Ibid. As hard a task, as with a veil to cover the sun's beams. Mas- singer. Harder than to prop a tower with a deceiving reed. Ibid. than to prop a falling tower. A. Hill. HARDY as a lion. Chaucer, Lidgate, $ others. as the Nemean lion's nerve. Shakespear. HARMLESS as doves. Sacred Script., Otrvay, fy others. as the turtle. A. Philips. as the turtle of the woods. Otrvay. as lambs. Watts. harmless and innocent as sporting lamb. J. Smith. as a sheep. Herrick. as a kid. Play, Fickle Shep- herdess as the smile of infancy. W. Hawkins. as a child. \ J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as an infant's play. W. Con- per. as pilgrims' kisses on the shrines of virgin martyrs. Cum- berland. flame, as harmless as a lambent fire. Dryden. Harm- less and without effect, as is the echo of a cannon's crack dis- charged against the battlements of heaven. Play, King John. Harmless as the silent dead. Preston's App. Rhodius. HARMONIOUS as the spheres. /. Taylor, E. Young, fy others. as planets move. J. Adams. Music, more harmonious than the spheres yield in their heavenly motions. Massinger. Voice, harmonious as celestial music. T. Maurice. Accents, more har- monious than the lark's when she sings hymns to harvest. Glap- thorne. Voice, more harmonious than the lark, whose tuneful notes awake the cheerful spring. W. R. Chetwood. Harmo- nious as when the morning stars together sang, and all the sons of God shouted for joy. W. Thompson. as the voice of angels singing before the Eternal Majesty. Spenser. He who is a stranger to the feelings of a parent, may take delight in the mellifluous notes of a flute, or in the more sonorous viol ; but to the parent's ear these are less harmonious than the simple music of an infant's prattle. Specimens of Hindoo Literature, by N. E. Kindersley. HARMONIZE. See ! o'er the harp her beauteous form she bends, H E A while as she sweeps the chords, their melody in richness har- monizes with her face. Author of the Times, a Poem. HARSH as a grating wheel. Play, Nerv trick to cheat the Devil. The voice of ravens in the dead of night conveys not harsher notes into mine ears. W. Cartwright. Harsh as the raven's note. Theobald. Sound harsher in my ears than Scylla's dogs unto the frighted seaman. Play, Muleasses the Turk. Sound harsh and fatal as the mandrake's groan. L. Theobald. HASTE as bees to flowers. Sylvester. as a generous unfleshed hound, that hears from far the hunter's horn and cheerful cry. Dryden. as they would fly death. Poolers Parnassus. HASTY as fire. Shakespear. Hasty and rash as fire. L. Theo- bald. HATE him, as I do hell's pains. Shakespear. as I would a cockatrice. Play, Lord Cromnell. Hate thee like a serpent's hissing. Play, Cupid's Whirligig. HATEFUL to my soul, as sin unto the saints. Corye. as hell. Beaumont fy Fletcher, J. Philips, and others. To my sight you are as hateful grown, as hell's severest tortures to my thoughts. Play, Forgery. Hateful as Cocytus' misty mouth. Shakespear. More hateful than contempt. Mrs. Conley. Hate- ful as the name of slave. P. Francis. as the grave. Pope. as the reek of a lime-kiln. Shakespear. HAUNT him like a sprite. Pasquil's Nightcap. Haunt him like a phantom. Sir W. Scott. Haunt me like a passion. W. Wordsworth. HAZARDOUS. As hazardous for a moderate understanding to usurp the prerogatives of genius, as for a common form to play over the airs of uncontested beauty. Dr. Johnson. HEALING as balm. Jephson. as the drops of Gilead balm. W. Thompson. HEALTHFUL as the blood of grapes to age. Sir W. Davenant. HEALTHY as the month of May. R. Estcourt. H HE A HEARTLESS, helpless, wild, as flocks of timid sheep, or driven deer. M. Bruce. HEAVE like the sea. Montgomery. like a sea in restless mo- tion. The Liberal. like ridgy waves. Ossian. HEAVENLY as a seraph's note. Dodsley's Collection. HEAVY as lead. Lidgate, Shakespear, 8$ others. Heavy and dull as lead. Marlowe. Heavier than the sand of the sea. Sa- crcd Script. than Atlas' burthen. Lacy. A weight as heavy as the world on Atlas' shoulders. Duchess of Newcastle. My revenge, as heavy as Jove's wrath wrapped in a thunderbolt, is falling on him. J. Shirley. Make my heart heavy as a stone. Lidgate. HEEDLESS as the wind. Poetical Calendar. HERD like wounded deer in company. Dryden. HIDEOUS as despair. E. Young. HIGH as thought can soar. Dodsley's Collection. as the head of fame. Congreve. as heaven. Marlowe, ShaJcespear, 8f others. Higher than the heavens. /Sacred Script. than heaven from hell. Sylvester. High as the heavens are raised above the ground we tread. Watts. as Phrebus shineth in his sphere. Lidgate. as the spheres. Congreve. as the skies. Sir W. Davenant. More high than stars. Sir P. Sidney. as Luna. /. Taylor. as the clouds. Marlowe, J. O'Keeffe, fy others. as Olympus. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Dryden, fy others. high as Olympus' cloud-dividing top. . Rarclins. as huge Olympus' top. C.Hopkins. as Atlas. Banks. High above these, as Atlas to a mole-hill. Ibid. as the Alpine hills. Play, Timoleon. as a monumental pyramid. Settle, Powell. as a steeple. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as a May-pole. Duchess of Newcastle. as cedars. R. Greene. High as I could pitch my lance. Shakespcar. HISS like snakes. Broome. HOARSE as the noise of many waters. Sacred Script. HOT HOLLOW as a vault. Faulkland. HOLY as religion. R. ShieL as the thoughts of dying saints, when angels hover o'er them. Cumberland. A flame as holy as that which burns in pious bosoms. Hodson, Holy as her- mit's vesper strain. Sir W. Scott. as altars' incense. Glap- , thorne. HONEST as truth itself. N. Rone. as the light. Shenstone. as the skin between his brows. Shakespear, W. Cartrvright. HONORED like a god. A. Brewer, Pope. HORRIBLE as hell. Spenser, Davenant, fy others. as death. W. Hemings, J. Stagg. as murderers. W. Thompson. HORRID as the gates of hell. T. Heywood. as the mandrake's groan. Shakespear. as the groan of a famished tiger leaping on his prey. Montgomery. as the hiss of dragons. N. Lee. as a murderer's dreams. Johnson. as Mars. Pope. Black and horrid as all the wars the elements when ruffled into storms, could e'er present. Play, Courtenay Earl of Devonshire. HOT as fire. Gorver, Lidgate, 8$ others. as hell. Fansharv, Cow- ley, 8f others. as Etna. Spenser, J. Shirley. as flaming Etna. Durfey. Fire, hotter than that of Etna. C. Hopkins. Hot as the current of melted metals that flows from the entrails of burning mountains. Ravenscroft. as flames of burning sul- phur. /. Ford. Hotter than Lucifer in all his flames. N. Lee. Hot as lightning. Glapthorne. Hotter than the lightning's fire. P. Pindar. Hot as thunder. Jonson. as the summer. Dray- ton. as the summer sun. A. Hill. as suns above the line. J. Smith. as the torrid zone. Poolers Parnassus. as ripe noon. A. Comley. Hotter than the dog-days. J.Corye. Hot as an oven. Sacred Script. as a furnace. Farquhar, J. P. Kemble. as Perillus' bull. Pooles Parnassus. as coals, when kindled through. Duchess of Newcastle. as molten lead. Shakespear. as molten gold. Otrvay. as 'liquid brass. W. Taverner. Hotter than melting flint, or fluid glass. Blackmore. Hot as gunpowder. Shakespear. as Jove. Ponifret.-* as zeal. Quarles. HO V as a burning fever. Poolers Parnassus. as any pepper. Sir W. Davenant. as a peppercorn. A. Maclaren. as peppered brandy. Garth. as a toast. R. Bernard. HOVER like bees o'er flowers. Lisle. HOWL like wolves in the wood. George Thornley. like the mid- night wolf amidst the deserts. N. Rome. like a northern tem- pest. Murphy. HUGE as high Olympus. Shakespear. as Leviathan. E. Young. HUMANE as mercy. Mrs. S. Gunning. HUMBLE as the child that meek and silent sinks to rest. Merrick. as the conquered. Semell. They come as humbly as they used to creep to holy altars. Shakespear. Humble as a cheater before a magistrate. Green's Tu quoque. as the lowliest shrub that bends to Heaven's least breath. Jonson's Sad Shepherd. as oziers bending to the wind. Congreve. as the earth. Jonson. as a lamb. Barclay. as a spaniel. Play, The Blunderer ; O'Keeffe. HUMMING like a swarm of bees. Dryden. HUMOROUS as winter. Shakespear. as nature. Sir W. Scott. as April. Jonson. as the wind. Dryden, Bevil Higgons. as quicksilver. Jonson. HUNGRY as the sea. Shakespear. as a hawk. 7. Shirley, E. Ward, 8$ others. as a hound. Robert Herrysone, P. Pindar. HUNTED like a beast of prey. Dryden. like hares. Fielding. HURL thee down, as Jove did giants from the skies. C. Hopkins. HUSHED as death. Shakespear, Durfey, <* others. as the grave. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. All is hush as the lone silence of the quiet grave. Play, Herminius fy Espasia, by Hart. as night. W. Gilbank. as midnight. Shakespear. Play, Traitor to himself. Hushed and silent as the mid of night. W. Browne. Hushed as midnight silence. Dryden. Hushed and silent as the lonely churchyard at the midnight hour. A. Cherry. Hushed as the foot of night. R. Blair. as dead I M M calms. N. Lee. All is hush'd as nature were retir'd, and the perpetual motion standing still. Ottvay. Hushed as the falling dews, whose noiseless showers impearl the folded leaves of evening flowers. Congreve. like waters in a calm. Durfey. as the sea becalmed. C. Hopkins. as infant winds in secret caverns locked. Play, Neglected Virtue. as the cradle babe, when chidden by its angry parent to a slumber. C. Gibber. as the babe upon its mother's breast. Byron. Hush it, as a nurse her infant's cry. Sir W. Scott. Hushed like a sleeping serpent underneath a bed of flowers. Pix. I J. IDLE. More idle than a madman's dream. Dekker. JEALOUS as usurpers. /. Carlile. as a turnkey. Beaumont $ Fletcher. JEST like a licensed fool. Donne. IGNORANT as dirt. Shakespear. ILLUMINE the soul by the light of contentment, as the world is irradiated by the sun. S. Rousseau's Floners of Persian Li- terature. ILLUSIVE as the dreams of morn. Jane West. ILLUSTRIOUS as the morn. Blackmore. More illustrious and clear than silver Venus in the evening sky. Joseph Beaumont. IMMACULATE as a sheet of white paper. Foote. IMMEASURABLE as the winds. Play, Abdication of Ferdinand. IMMORTAL as the soul. Play, Ungrateful Favorite; J. Trapp, fy others. IMMOVEABLE as fate. Play, Game of Chess; Glover. as faith. Glapthorne. as a steadfast rock. Translation of Pastor Fido. Like the deaf rock he stands immoveable. Gay. Im- moveable as mountains. /. Montgomery. IMM IMMUTABLE as fate. Dryden's Miscellany. as the laws of nature. Burke. IMPARTIAL as truth. South. IMPASSIVE as marble. The Liberal IMPATIENT as desire. Southern. as an eagle in a grate. Dr. Johnson. as the raging sea. Behn. as the wind. C. Shadwell. The unbroken colt is not more impatient of his rider's weight. M. Bladen. Impatient as a runner for the prize. Wandesford. IMPENETRABLE as rocks of adamant. G. Powell. My secret shall henceforth be as impenetrable as the philosopher's stone. Chapter of Accidents, by Lee. IMPERFECT as discourses in a dream. Lansdorvne. IMPERVIOUS as a rock of adamant. Dr. Johnson. IMPETUOUS as the wind. Dryden, Lisle. as the lightning. J. Dennis. as the storms. J. Beattie. Impetuous as a storm he rushed. A. Hill. In arms he rushes dreadful to the war, impetuous, rapid as contending winds. C. Johnson. Impe- tuous as descending floods. Prior. as a torrent rushing down a precipice. Goring. as a tigress new with young. Garth. IMPLACABLE as storms. C. Gibber. as fate. Poem, Tyranny the worst Taxation. IMPOSSIBLE as that any thing that is absurd or false, can by genuine and just consequence, issue from what is true. South. as that a false proposition should issue from a true. Ibid. as to add degrees to infinity, new measures to immensity, and further improvements to a boundless, absolute, and unim- proveable perfection. Ibid. as for him to see, who wants eyes. Ibid. as for a man to live, and not to breathe. Ibid. as for a sick man to be at ease. Tillotson. as that fire should cool. South. as to kindle fire with snow. Shakespear. as that Stygian darkness should blend with light, frost with fire, or day with night. Quarks. as to confine in crystal gaols the sun's resplendent beams. Sir W. Davenant. as to reach down a star. Ibid. as to catch the wind in a net that bloweth in the INC air. Lilly, as to cast a drop of water in the breaking gulf, and take unmingled thence, that drop again, without adding or diminishing. Shakespear. as to silence an echo by the strength of voice. E. Young. as to reconcile the God of Truth and the Father of Lies. Tillotson. as for Heaven to hold com- munion with Hell. W. Thompson. as youth in health to dote upon a grief. Middleton. as to cure a disease by an invective. South. Impossible and contradictious, as for a man to be envious and innocent too. Ibid. Impossible ! thou might'st as well attempt With thy weak arm to grasp Jove's thunderbolt ; With thy impotent voice stand on the beach, And bid the roaring tide, storm-lash'd, recede And sleep in quiet thou might'st as well Think with thy breath to blow out night's bright lamp, And leave its Eastern worshippers in darkness, Or with thy hand the fulgent star eclipse That blazes on the noon- tide brow of day, As think to quench this bosom's deathless flame. Play, Gonzanga. IMPROBABLE, as that the lioness should starve to spare her prey. Lansdorvne. IMPUDENT as the basilisk, who stares in the face of man until he kill him with his eyes. Sir W. Davenant. INACTIVE as the foot of a dull rock. W. Thompson. INCONSISTENT as truth and falsehood. Farquhar. INCONSTANT as the moon. Dryden, Gibber, $ others. as the wind. Shakespear, T. Heyrvood, others. as the changing wind. Hooles Ariosto. as the passing wind. Smollett. as island winds. Behn. More inconstant than light whirlwinds. Glapthorne. than autumn's blasts. T. Kyd. than the air. Loner. Not more inconstant is the breath of air that blows one moment, and the next is calm. John Tracy. Inconstant as the summer gales that kiss the fragrant bosom of the rose. Mary Robinson. More inconstant than the sea. Jasper Hey- INC mood, Jonson, fy others. Inconstant as waves. Smollett. More inconstant than the giddy wave. Poolers Parnassus. Incon- stant as the seas and winds. Behn. as the rising winds, or flowing seas. Mrs. Manley. as April. C. Johnson. as the flying showers of rain in April. Glapthorne. as the shadows we survey. S. Boyse. INCREASE like a small torrent fed with evening showers. Akenside. like a flood in a narrow vale. Ossian. The noise increases as the billows roar, when rolling from afar they threat the shore. Dryden. INDUSTRIOUS as the ant. T. KUUgrew. INEXORABLE as the grave. G. Powell. as seas to the prayers of mariners. Glapthorne. like consuming fire. Play, Costly Whore. INFECTIOUS as the plague. F. Manning, in his Generous Choice. Fear is an infectious sin, it catches like the plague. C. Johnson. Infecting like a pestilential air. Philip Frorvde. INFERIOR as a weak starlight to the mid-day sun. R.Brome. INFINITE as space. SoameJenyns. as boundless space. Byron. INFLEXIBLE as death. Play, Abdication of Ferdinand. like hardened steel. Ajax, in Greek Tragic Theatre. as a rock. James Kenney. INGENIOUS as want. Gildon. INGRATITUDE like autumn's treacherous blast, that blows and gives the death-wound to the flower, that gave its breeze the fragrant power. The Cossack, by Robert Ely. INHOSPITABLE as the quicksands. Marmion. INIMICAL, as dogs to pigs. P. Pindar. INNOCENT as truth. Plays, Sir John Oldcastle; Bonduca : $ others. as the unstained soul of truth. Corye. as grace itself. Shakespear. as new-born virtue. R. Davenport. as angels. Durfey, R. Estcour toothers. as infant angels. Pix. as chaste Diana. M. Bladen. as vestals. Play, Pcetus fy Arria. Inno- INS cent and chaste as purest vestals. Theobald. Innocent and spot- less as a vestal. E. Morris. Innocent as infancy. Farquhar. as the child unborn. Sedley ; Play, Folly of Priestcraft, Sf others. as the babe unborn. T. Holcroft, C. Dibdin. The new-born babe is not more innocent. G. E. Howard, D. Terry. Innocent as harmless infants are. C. Sounders. Thoughts, in- nocent as infant's. Sir R. Howard. Innocent as day. Duchess of Newcastle. as is the light. Play, Crafty Cromwell. as purest air. Ibid. Thy heart is free, thy breast still innocent as cry- stal streams unsullied by the blast of ruffling winds and the loud tempest's rage. Goring. Innocent as lambs. Barclay, Yarrington, fy others. Innocent and tame as a lamb. Somervile. The tender lamb that never nipped the grass is not more in- nocent. Home. Innocent as doves. Sacred Script., Farquhar, fy others. as the sucking lamb, or harmless dove. Shakespear. as flowers. Sir W. Davenant. as buds that sprout in May. Tatham. as flowers that yield their smiles unto the distant sun. E. Howard. as is the new-fallen snow. J. Shirley. as water-gruel. Murphy. as chicken-broth. Stevenson. INNOCUOUS as the firstling of a flock. W. Wordsworth. INNUMERABLE as the stars of night, or stars of morning (dew-drops), which the sun impearls on every leaf and every flower. Milton. as the sand which is by the sea-shore. Sacred Script. INSATIABLE as death. Sacred Script. as fate. Somervile. as the grave. Marston, South, others. Insatiate as the grave. Lilly, Beaumont fy Fletcher, fy others. More insatiable and devouring than fire. Duchess of Newcastle. Insatiable as covetousness. South. INSENSATE as the brutes that rove the extended wild. J. Merrick. INSENSIBLE as rock. /. Reed. Surprise insensibly as sleep. Pordage. INSEPARABLE like Juno's swans. Shakespear. INS INSOLENT as power when put in vulgar hands. Dryden. INTANGLE thyself in thy own work like a silkworm. J. Webster. INTRICATE as are the windings of a labyrinth. Play, Valiant Welshman. More intricate than a lybyrinth. T. Heyrvood. INVENTIVE as Archimedes. Duchess of Newcastle. INVIOLABLE as recorded oaths. Jephson. INVISIBLE as darkness to the eye. M. Bruce. as air to mor- tal eyes. Dryden. as Harmony who springs waked by young Zephyrs from Eolian strings. Hayley. as the winds. Play, Abdication of Ferdinand. JOCUND as sprightly May. Rawlins. as a vernal morn. R. Merry. as the effulgent morn. Universal Magazine. as huntsmen at their sunrise meeting. C. Gibber. as the soar- ing lark. D. Deacon. JOVIAL as cup and can. Burkhead. JOYFUL as saints forgiven when they die. Sir W. Davenant. as captive set at liberty. Sir W. Scott. as lovers when their nuptials are nigh. Sir W. Davenant. No mother that has mourned her long-lost infant rejoices half so much to find her darling, or views the lovely babe with half the fondness I look on thee. C. Hopkins. Joyful as when a trembling wretch wakes from a frightful dream, and views the day. C. Beck- ingham. JOYOUS as morning. W. Wordsworth. IRE ECONCILE ABLE as antipathy. South. IRRESISTIBLE as the sun's rays in its meridian glory. W. Davies. IRREVOCABLE as the strict law of the Medes and Persians. It. Baron. JUMP like a grasshopper. Play, Generous Artifice. JUST as heaven. Massinger, Hayley. as honour. Mallet. as the scales of heaven that weigh the seasons. Dryden. as Aristides. Thomson. as Minos. Smith. KI N K. IvEEN as scorn. Savage. as the lightning. Somervile. as Jove's lightning winged athwart the skies. Broome. Keener than the lightning's flash. J. Hervey. Keen as blighting winds. E. Ward. as meagre harpies for their food. Garth. Appetite, keen as the greedy hawk's that is ready just to seize his longed-for prey. E. Filmer. Appetite, keen as a wolf. L. Macnally. Keen as a razor. J. Davies' Scourge of Folly, Gay, $ others. as is the razor's edge. Sliakespear. as the needle to inflict a wound. Poetical Calendar. Look as keen as vinegar. A. Brewer. KILL like mandrake's shrieks. Gildon. Kill the wholesome blossom like a mildew. F. North. Killing as the plague. Massinger, W. Sampson. as frost to flowers. Milton. as the canker to the rose. Ibid. as a northern blast. Tote. Eyes, more killing than the basilisk's. Play, Courtenay Earl of De- vonshire. KIND as compassion. Mallet. as mercy. W. Thompson. as goodness. Gildon. as the charities of dying saints. G. Servell. as angels. N. Cotton. as interceding angels. Banks. as will- ing saints. Sir W. Davenant. Not Heaven is more to dying martyrs kind. Dryden. Kind as lovers. Sir W. Davenant. as parting lovers' tears. Otway. as love. R. Shiel. as the life of love. Play, Jack Drums Entertainment. as the sun's blest influence. A. Conley. as the sun to the new married spring. Dekker. as the spring to the earth. Ibid. as foster- ing breezes. Shenstone. Kind and refreshing as the spicy gale. R. Barford. as clouds to earth. W. Duke of Newcastle. Kind and gentle as the dew of heaven. Cumberland. as kings upon their coronation day. Dryden. as the turtle. Gay. as a dove. D. Terry. Kinder than billing turtles. A. Hill. KIN KINDLE like a burning coal. Dryden, S. Johnson. like fires provoked by wind. Lansdorvne. Kindle and burn like dry wood. W. Painter's Palace of Pleasure. KISS softer than a southern wind. Centlivre. L. LABOUR like the restless bee. Earl of Sterline. like the ocean after storm. W. L. Bowles. like a collier's horse. B. Barnes. LAME as Vulcan. Jonson. as a cripple. A. Corvley. LAMENT Like the nightingale whose plaintive song bewails her ravished brood, here will I still lament my father's wrongs, and teach the echo to repeat my moan. Electra, in Greek Tra- gic Theatre. LANGUID as a yawn. Poem, Paradise of Coquettes. LANGUISH as a gathered flower. Spenser. like a withering flower. Otway. like a drooping flower crushed by the weight of some relentless shower. Garth. Languish in affliction like flowers that droop and hang their pining heads beneath the rigour of relentless skies. Play, Zenobia. like a flowerless plant that droops beneath the frown of an eclipse. Play, Pro- phetess. LANK as unthrift's purse. Donne. LASTING as God's love. Pomfret. as the light of the New Jerusalem. /. Hervey. as eternity. Ibid. as the frame of universal nature. Lillo. LATE. Too late, like a pardon after execution. Shakespear. Too late, like sunbeams on the blasted blossoms. Suckling. LAUGH like an hyena. Shakespear. LAVISH as the spring. Shenstone. LAWLESS as the sea, or wind. Waller, F. Beaumont. as the LI G wind. Mr. Godolphin, in Dryderis Miscellany. Lawless and wild as the rude winds that lash the sea to madness. L. The- obald. LEAN as a skeleton. T. Shadrvell. as a rake. Chaucer, Hey- vey, Sf others. Lean and meagre as a rake. Spenser. Lean as a lath. T. Heywood, as a gridiron. P. Hoare. as Lent. /. Shirley. as famine. H. Ward. Leaner than death. Beau- mont <$f Fletcher, R. Brome. than the new moon. Dekker. LEAP as a hart. Sacred Script. like wanton kids in pleasant spring. Spenser. Leaping like a giddy kid. Sir P. Sidney. Leap like a frog. Liberal. LEPROUS as sin itself. Dekker. LEVEL as the seas becalmed. C. Gibber. as the sleeping sea. Southey. LIBERAL as heaven. Gay, Southey. as the abundant hand of Heaven. W. Pater son. as spring. Scott of Amwell. as the sun. Chapman. as the sun that shines on all. Sir W. Dave- nant. as the light of day. W. Corvper. as the air. Shake- spear, Cockain. as the vagrant air. Churchill. as the sea. Play, Jeronimo. LIFELESS as a corpse. Cumberland. as a stone. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. LIGHT as day. Duchess of Newcastle, Dodsley's Collection, 8f others. as noon. Sylvester. Light and active as the morn. W. Tasker. Light as the lightning glimpse they ran, they flew. Milton. as air. Shakespear, Chapman, fy others. as ether. Cumberland. as morning air. R. O. Fenwick. as viewless air. Pope. as fleeting air. Play, The Country Wed- ding. as empty air. W. Thompson. as a puff of empty air. Watts. as embodied air. Milman. Light and warm as air and fire. B. Hoadly. as wind. Barclay, Lilly, fy others. as fleeting wind. Ramsay. as the wind at which the tremulous aspen scarcely bends. London. Lighter than wind or air. Rarvlins, Light as the breeze. Rogers. as the breeze that LIG hails the infant morn. T. Gent. Light as flies the gale along the lily-silvered vale. Cawthorn. Light and unbounded as the mountain gales. A. Hill Thy lip a touch receives light as the zephyr's whispered kiss. Friendship's Offering. Heart, light as summer clouds, and as inconstant as the winds that bear them. A. Macdonald. Light and dissolving as the falling snow. John Tracy. Light as the foam upon the waters. W. Cowper. as the foamy surf that the wind severs from the broken wave. Ibid. as foam that plays the ocean waves among. Landon. Light and unstable as the crested foam which rides the dancing surge. W. Hodson. Light as the waterfall's spray. Landon. More light than floating billows. Fraunce. Light as a feather. Play, The London Prodigal-, J. Heynood, fy others. as the downy feather. /. Hervey. as the feathered mote which the least breath of wind hurries away like a tempest. Ibid. as the volatile atom which by the gentlest agitation of the air is wafted to and fro in perpetual agitation. Ibid. Lighter than down. C. Johnson, Dyer, fy others. Light as thistle-down. Mrs. Brooke. as the down of thistles. C. Johnson. as gos- samer, Moses Mendez, Preston, fy others. as fur. Jonson. as a bubble. Play, Country Girl. Lighter than children's bub- bles blown by winds. Dryden. than frothy bubbles, or di- spersed smoke. Glapthorne. Light as a balloon. Farce, One and All. as a bird. Poem, The Theriad. No bird so light as they. Pope. Light as the lark that carolled o'er his head. R. Bloomjield. as a lark. SirW. Scott. as leaf of tree. Robert Herrysone. as a falling leaf that springs away before the ze- phyr's wings. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as flying leaf. Ibid. Lighter than blossoms, or the fleeting air that sheds them. Dryden's Miscellany. Light as the scattered blossom of the heath that summer chases with her evening breath. Poem, Charlemagne, by Lucien Bonaparte, translated. Lighter than levity. Churchill. than inconstant thought. Sir W. Davenant. than a madman's dreams. A. Cowley. Light as the va- pours of a morning dream. Dryden as feathered Mercury. B. Hoadly. as the angel shapes that bless an infant's dream. LI V T. Moore. as a wood-nymph. Cornwall. Tread as light as dancing fairies step by night. E. Ward. Light as the fairy step at morn swift passing o'er the unbending corn. Mrs. Brooke. Her steps were light as though a winged angel trod over earth's flowers, and feared to brush away their delicate hues. H. H. Milman, Lighter than flame. R. Greene. Light as fire. T. Heywood. as a grasshopper. Congreve. as a fly. Play, Contention between Liberality Prodigality ; C. Shad- trail. as the roe. Jeplison. as the bounding roe. Potter's Eschylus. as the sportive fawn. /. Dillon. Light are her sallies as the tripping fawn's forth- star tied from the fern where she lay couched. W. Wordsworth. Light as the antelope I would tread the steeps. Dillon. as cork. Herrick, Duke, fy others. as chaff. E. P. Knight, R. Lloyd. as chaff that flies before the wind. Dryden. as the summer's dust. E. Young. as truth itself. W. Whitehead. Death creeps on him lightly as a shadow. Cumberland. Light as the shadows flitting o'er the plain. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. LIKE as cherry is to cherry. Shakespear. as pilchards to her- rings. Ibid. as rain to water. Ibid. as two drops of water. Miller. Water to water nor milk to milk is not liker than he is to you. Play, Menechmus. as like as eggs. Shake- spear. Like as straw to straw. Gay. Like each other as are peas. Swift. as star to star. A. Brewer. Narcissus to the thing for which he pined, was not more like. Pooles Par- nassus. LIMPID as water dropping from the clefts of mossy marble. Dyer. LITTLE as rainy drops which fluttering fly, borne by the winds along a low'ring sky. Eusden. LIVELY as the smiling day. A. Hill. Lively and gay as a summer's morn. W. R. Chetwood. as tints of young Iris' bow. J. G. Cooper. Lively and alert as an owl at midnight. T. Holcroft. LIVID as lead. Byron. LO A LOATHE him as much as youth and beauty hate a sepulchre. Middleton fy Rowley. Loathe thee more than Heaven does hypocrites, or hell the just. Oldmixon. LOATHSOME as the briny sea appears to him who languishes with thirst for some known fountain. Akenside as a toad. Shakespear. More loathsome to her eyes than a swoln toad. Play, Ungrateful Favorite. than spotted adder or crawling toad. A. Macdonald. than a leper. Randolph. Loathsome as a leprous skin. Play, How to choose a good Wife. A breath more loathsome than the stench of Nile. Play, Herod 8f An- tipater. Loathsome as impiety. Peaps. LOFTY as heaven's blue arch. W. Thompson. as the pine. A. Pasquin. LONELY as a turtle that hath lost her mate. Chaucer. as the traveller lost and benighted. S. Bamford. LONG as a tedious tale. Shakespear. as the day to him who works for debt. Pope. as the year's dull circle seems to run, when the brisk minor pants for twenty-one. Ibid. as a May- pole. Play, Entertainment at Richmond. LOOK as dreadfully as death. Dryden. Detect him in a shame- ful action, and the eye of the discoverer, like that of the basilisk, shall look him dead. South. Dart poisonous flashes like the basilisk, and look him dead. Sir John Denham. O that I were a basilisk to look thee dead. H. Carey. Looks kill not, but they can destroy with fatal blight, the buds of joy. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. As the sensitive plant shrinks from the slightest touch, so does an unkind look cause the countenance of the dependent guest to fall. Specimens of Hindoo Literature, by N. E. Kindersley. So Clytia looked upon the sun till she turned Heliotrope. Poolers Parnassus. LOOSE as heaps of sand. Dryden. Loose and dangerous as the sand. C. Gibber. as air. Marston. as the winds. Behn, Bul- lock. as the zone of negligence. Cawthorn. LOST as a billow in the unbounded main. E. Young. I die LOU forgotten here, lost like a blossom which the wand'ring wind blows from the bosom of the spring to mix with summer's dust. Sir W. Davenant. LOUD as a storm. Durfey, Yalden, fy others. as thunder. Chaucer, Shakespear, fy others. as Sinai's thunder. Campbell. Louder he'll blow, and it shall speak more shrill than when from Sinai's hill, in thunder through the horrid reddening smoke, the Almighty spoke. Pomfret. Loud as the noisy thunder. Watts. Louder than the breath of thunder. Banks. Loud as mighty thunder breaking from a cloud. Poems on State Affairs; Louder than thunder roaring from the clouds. Doyne's Tasso. Loud as thunder shot from the divided cloud. Poole's Parnassus. as the deep-mouthed roar of thunder, when it bursts the riven cloud, and bellows through the ether. M. Bruce. Not louder roars the three-edged bolt of heaven, when formed by Vulcan, or when thrown by Jove. Poetical Calendar. Loud, as if like Bacchus born in thunder. Dryden. Loud and quick as thunder. Play, Spanish Glpsey. Loud as the burst of cannon rends the skies. Pope. Loud was his voice as sounds the rapid tide, which in strong currents tears the mountain's side. Poem, Fragments of Fingal. as the sea. Duke. Voice, loud as ocean. E. Young. Louder than the deep in storms. Ibid. Loud as the roaring ocean in a storm. TV. Rowe. as the sound of many waters. M. Bruce. as waves. Watts. as a rushing stream when o'er the rugged precipice it roars, and foaming thunders on the rocks below. M. Bruce. as the surges when the tempest blows, that dashed on broken rocks tumultuous roar. Pope. as the wind. Ossian, Durfey, fy others. as the winds that lash the raging seas. Cumberland. Loud and impetuous was their stormy breath, as blasts that menace mariners with death. Preston's App. Rhodius. Loud as the blast my frantic cries shall sound. M. Robinson. Loud as northern blasts that swell the deep. Dur- fey. as the sound of the cherubim's wings. Sacred Script. as a trumpet. Swift. as the trump 01 heaven, whose sacred blast must unite mouldered earth, and wake the dead. Durfey, LO V Speak as loud as Mars. Shakespear. Loud as the roar en- countering armies yield, when shouting millions shake the thundering field. Pope. as Fame. Dryden, Mrs. Manley. Loud as Fame can speak, proclaim an universal joy. Southern, Not half so loud the bellowing deeps resound, When stormy winds disclose the dark profound ; Less loud the winds that from the Eolian hall Roar through the woods, and make whole forests fall ; Less loud the woods when flames in torrents pour, Catch the dry mountain, and its shades devour ; With such a rage the meeting hosts are driven, And such a clamour shakes the sounding heaven. Pope. Loud as gaunt lions bellowing shake the woods. Fawkes. as the wolves on Orca's stormy steep, howl to the roarings of the Northern deep. Pope. Voice, louder than Stentor. Sir J. H. Moore. Louder than a bell. Swift. Loud as a parish bull. P. Pindar. as a hog in a gate. Goldsmith. LOVE. I love thee more than the sunburnt earth loves soften- ing showers, more than new ransomed captives love the day, or dying martyrs breathing forth their souls, the acclamations of whole hosts of angels. Cumberland. I love you more than the ewe loves her lamb, the doe her fawn, or the dove her mate. L. Macnally. Loved her more than doves their mates, than ewes their lambs, than tender kids their fawning dams. Motteux. More loved by me than by the eye the light. T. Cooke. Loved as living breath. Spenser. LOVELY as benevolence. T. Chalmers. as spotless honour. T. Scot. Lovelier than renown. H. More. as Pandora, whom the gods endowed with all their gifts. Milton. as Venus. E. Smith, Mrs. Manley, fy others. as a seraph. Blackmore. as an angel. J. Wild. as a cherubim. Dimond. Lovelier far than Eve. Banks. More lovely far than Juno when she strove to look most lovely in the eyes of Jove. Hayley. Lovely as light. Dry den's Miscellany. as the first created light. Ibid. as the sun-beam of heaven. Ossian. as the first beam of the LO V sun. Ibid. as the blush that breaks the day. R. Davenport. as' the sun's first ray when it breaks the clouds of an April day. Sir W. Scott. More lovely far than is the morning sun when first she opes her oriental gates. Play, Taming of a Shrew. More lovely than the pleasant sun himself, when he shines through the golden fleece of the celestial Ram. W. Joy- ner. More lovely than the sun's returning ray to Northern re- gions at the half-year's morn. /. G. Cooper. Lovely like the beam of the setting sun. Ossian. Lovely as the western sky to the 'rapt Persian worshipping the sun. J. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. Lovely as the morn. Robert Omen, H. Boyd, 8$ others. as is the morning. R. Davenport. as Aurora. Gay. Aurora on a May morning never looked so lovely. Holcroft. Lovely as the blushing morn. C. Hopkins, E. Young, fy others. as the blush of morn. Bertram, by Sir E.Brydges. like the gleaming dawnings of the morn when day first kindles. Faulk- land. as the morn that dawns in heaven. W. Richardson. as the dawn. T. Noble. as the dawn of day. Aurelia,aPoem. as the breaking day. Dryden's Miscellany. as the rising dawn when the new-born light salutes the joyful earth impurpling half the skies. Somervile. as the beam of the morning. Ossian. as the dawning east. C. Cotton. as the beams that play about the east and lead the coming day. Dryden's Miscellany. Lovely as the morning beam, yet pure as the fountain that re- flects its ray. Morton. as the blush that breaks the day. Da- venport. More lovely than the day which from the east in radiant beams appears. M. Coppinger. than when Lucifer displays his beaming forehead through the gates of morn, to lead the train of Phoebus and the spring. Akenside. More lovely beams thy lucid eye to me, than all the lustrous orbs of night. C. Fox. Lovely as spring. Poem, Leonora to Tasso ; J. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. as a young spring. Daven- port. as the youthful spring when happy nature drest in ver- dure smiles. W. Thompson. as the smiling infant spring. Field- ing. Lovelier than the spring in May. G. Colman. Lovely as 12 LOW May. M. Bruce, Pasquin. as the day that opes the rosy morn of gentle May. W. Mavor. as morn in May adorned with all the glories of the spring. N. Richards, Lovely to the view as flourishing May clad in the pride of spring. Play, New Trick to cheat the Devil. Lovely and gay as the enamelled valley, when blooming Nature first serenely smiled, and gave to every flower a double lustre. James Miller. Lovely and lonely as a single star. T. K. Hervey. as Luna. R. Greene. Lovely in her tears, as when the morning's face is washed in dew. Sir W. Davenant. Not Flora's self more lovely smiles, when to the dawning year her opening bosom heavenly fragrance breathes. Somervile. No beauteous blossom of the fragrant spring, though the fair child of Nature newly born, can be so lovely. Otway. Lovely as the mountain flower, when the ruddy beams of the rising sun gleam on its dew-covered sides. Ossian. cheek, lovely as the apple flower, or summer evening's glow. Sauthey. Lovely as a budding rose. Ibid. as vernal roses. T. Penrose. Lovelier than the new-blown rose. Universal Ma- gazine. Tints, as lovely as the opening rose displays when kissed by sunbeams of the morn. James Bird. Lovely as the summer's bloom. H. Jones. as dewy fragrance in the glow of eve. The Saviour, a Poem. as Eden ere the fall of man. M. A. Browne. Voice more lovely than a seraph's hymn. R. Shiel. LOW as beggary. Rawlins. as Erebus. T. Heywood. as hell. Play, Ctzsar's Revenge ; Dryden, fy others. as hell is from heaven. Shakespear. as earth. Play, Sir John Oldcastle ; M. Pix, Sf others. as earth's foundation stone is from the top of Etna. Play, Damon fy Pythias. You have humbled my proud heart low as the earth. Carlell. as the dust. Play, Zelmane. as the centre. Play, Feigned Friendship. Stooped his anointed head as low as death. Shakespear. Low as obedience. A. Brewer. as the shrub. Savage. LOWER like a storm. Pitt. MAD LUCID as air.' Shenstone. Lucid and lovely as the morning star. Bruce. Lucid like truth. A. Hill; Poem, Progress of Wit. A light more lucid than the golden ray, which in the east pro- claims approaching day. J. B. Surges. LUDICROUS as to see an old fellow aping the extravagancies of youth. Play, Laughable Lover. LULLING as falling water's hollow noise. Gay. as the song of Indian bees. T. Moore. Lulled like the depths of ocean when at rest. Byron. LUMINOUS as a star. Ravenscroft. LUSCIOUS as the bee's nectareous dew. Pope. as locusts. Shakespear. LUSTROUS as the orb of noon. Poem, Paradise of Coquettes. LUSTY as the early day. Pook's Parnassus. as the youthful morn. Ibid. as the flower of youth. Ibid. LUXURIANT and unbounded as the sea. Thomson. M. JViAD as the winds. C. Davenant ; Play, Fickle Shepherdess. as the northern wind. Sir W. Davenant, C. Davenant. as roll- ing tempests. Play, Female Wits. as the sea. Godolphin, in Dryden' s Miscellany ; J. Armstrong. as the vexed sea. Shake- spear. as the warring elements. T. Dibdin. as the seas and wind, when both contend which is the mightier. Shakespear. as the raging billows of the sea, the baited panther, or Ne- mean lion; or as the tiger in his search of prey when cruel ap- petite had whet his fury. Banks. Madder than hunted lions. Play, Fatal Discovery. Mad as a Bedlamite. C. Macklin. as the priestess of the Delphic god. N. Rome. as fire. Mar- lowe. as to build on a hill of sand. R. Davenport. as the vanquished bull when forced to yield his lovely mistress, and forsake the field. Dryden. as a mad dog. Shakespear. Mad M A J as a March hare. J. Heyrvood, Beaumont fy Fletcher, fy others. as a Libyan wilderness by night, with all its lions up in chase or fight. J. Montgomery. MAJESTIC as a god. Pope, Mr. May's King Asa. as Jove. Lansdorvne. as when Juno, throned above the deities by the side of Jove, lends her proud smile celestial, while her Lord showers heaven's bounties on the world below. Cornwall. Deep on his brow imprinted sorrow sat, majestic as a cloud upon the morn. G. E. Howard. Majestic as the sky's bright panoply. Universal Magazine. Mien, as majestic as the moon at full. Specimens of Hindoo Literature, by N. E. Kindersley. Majestic as the storm that broods upon the mountain. M. R. Mitford. as the forest oak. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. MALICIOUS as a witch. Play, The Ball as a monkey. Corye. MALLEABLE as the Ophir gold. Chapman. MANIFEST as light. H. Boyd. Appear as manifest as mid- day's sun. Play, Swetnam arraigned. MANTLE like a standing pond. Shakespear. MANY as the stars of the sky in multitude. Sacred Script. as the stars that gild the sky. W. Wilkie. as the sand which is by the sea-shore in multitude. Sacred Script. like dancing atoms on a summer's day. Poole's Parnassus. Unnumbered motes that in the sun do play are not so many. Ibid. Many as in the sea are little water drops. Play, Dido. as the flow- ers that paint the ground. W. Wilkie. as the flowers that paint the April meadows. George Soane. MASSY as the earth. Play, Spanish Tragedy. MATURE. Affection from my breast sprung forth at once, mature as Pallas from the brain of Jove. Cumberland. MEAGRE as the skeleton of death. Durfey. MEEK as Patience. R. Shiel. Eyes, meek as gentle Mercy's at the throne of heaven. Earl of Carlisle. as a saint. Pope. as a cloistered saint. Play, Royal Cuckold. as Moses. MEL W, Corvper. as womanhood. Wordsworth. Meekly as a maiden. W. T. Moncrieff. Meek as doves. Sir W, Davenant, Pasquin, fy others. as the turtle dove. R. Blair. as the dove that draws the chariot of the Queen of Love. Fanshaw, Settle. as lambs. Sylvester, Cumberland, fy others. Meekly as doves whose livers have no gall. Sir W. Davenant. Meek as the violet. Pollok. as parting day. B. Hook. Meek as meek might be. Dray ton. MELANCHOLY as day when sun sets. Faulkland. as night. Play, Gondolier. as dark night. Duchess of Newcastle. Look as melancholic as midnight. Jonson. Melancholy as a watch- light. Congreve, C. Shadivell. as a discarded statesman. Mountfort. as a poor servant out of place. Murphy. Look as melancholy as if there was a funeral going on in the house. Fielding. Melancholy as a turtle that has lost its mate. Play, Phillis at Court. as an owl in the day time. A. Corvley. as an owl at noon day. Play, Irishman in London. as the drone of a Lincolnshire bagpipe. Shakespear, Behn. as an unlaced drum. Centlivre. as a fiddle with one string. T. Holcroft. as a bass viol in a concert. Greens Tu quoque. as a lover's lute. Shakespear. as a lodge in a warren. Sir W. Davenant. as a cat. Lilly, Gay, others. as a gib cat. Shakespear. as a hare. Ibid. as a lugged bear. Ibid. as an old lion. Ibid. as a sick monkey. J. Leanerd. as a moulting chicken. Cumberland. MELODIOUS as stringed harp swept by the winds in autumn. Cornwall. as the nightingale first heard beneath Arabian heavens, wooing the rose. Ibid. as the new mated thrush. Ibid. as the bird that calls the morning as the last star goes down in the west, and out of sight is heard. Cornwall. Voice, melodious as revolving spheres attuned by touch angelic. J. B. Surges. MELT as morning dew beneath the eye of day. W. Hodson. like the morning dew. G. Keate. Melted from my sight like a spring dew-drop. Mrs.Hemans. Melt away like a bubble. G. M ER Keate. like mist. Ossian. like mist-wreaths in the sun. Sir W. Scott. like snow. Marlowe, Byron, fy others. like snow before the sun. Chaucer, Harington, $ others. Melting like snows before the spring-tide sun. Meilan. Melting as snow be- fore the mid-day sun. Sylvester. like snow before the scorch- ing rays of Phoebus. M. Bidden. Melt, as hills of snow dis- solve and run. Watts, Melt like shrinking snow upon a south- ern bank. Earl of Carlisle. Melt away like the weak snow which some warm sun has found fallen out of season. TheLiberal. Melt away like ice before the sun. G. Sandys. Melt away like ice before the sun's dissolving ray. Poole's Parnassus. Melt away as the ice in the fair warm weather. Ecclesiasticus. Melt like ice. Dryden. like ice in the sun. 72. Wilkinson. like frost before the sun. M. A. Browne. like wax. Durfey, Pa- radise of Coquettes. like wax before the fire. Sacred Script. like wax before the scorching flame. Poole's Parnassus. like wax before the sun. C. Middleton, in England's Parnassus. like wax before the mid-day sun. Quarles. Melt away like a watch candle. Play, Christmas Ordinary. Melt like butter. Jonson. like ointment. Sales Koran. Melting as the weather in a thaw. Jonson. Melting as babes. H. Brooke. Melting as a lover's prayer. Hughes. Melted as breath into the wind. Shakespear. Melt into gentler showers than April drops upon the infant flowers. Floriana, a pastoral Poem. like chafed odours melt in sweets away. Dryden. Melting as the syren's song. A. Senard. MERCIFUL and kind as a forgiving God. Dryden. as heaven. Rolt. The rose lipp'd cherubs round the throne of heav'n, Have not their bosoms more divinely warm With melting mercy, than that tender breast. Fettiplace Sellers. MERCILESS as death. Hayley. More merciless than the wild evening wolf. R. Davenport. MERRY as the morning lark. Play, Sir Giles Goosecap ; E. Moore. as the birds in spring. W. Wordsworth. Merry and gay as nature in the spring. Sir W. Davenant. as merry as the day is long. Shakespear, Miller, fy others. Merry as good company, good wine, good welcome can make good people. Shakespear, and imitated by Ottvay ^* Goldsmith. as a king. G. Peele, B. Holyday, 8f others. as Democritus. Play, King Charles the First. as a corporal upon pay day. Glapthorne* as a pie. Play, Shoemakers Holiday ; J. Davies' Scourge of Folly. as the popinjay. Chaucer, Drayton. as crickets. Shakespear, J. Davies, $ others. as a kitten. R. Burns. as a fiddle. C. Gibber. as a marriage bell. Byron. as cup and can. J. Davies. as a morrice-dancer. E. Ward. MIGHTY as Phlegrean Jove. N. Rome. Mightier than the sea. Donne. MILD as Mercy. W. Shirley, B. Hoole. Countenance, mild as Mercy looking on Repentance' tear. Pollok. Mild as love. Mrs. Brooke. Mild and gentle as soft peace. Jane Wiseman. as modest virtue. Durfey ; Play, Unequal Match. as hea- venly seraphs. Blackmore. In manners as an angel mild. /. Stagg. Mild, gentle, affectionate as an angel/ F. Reynolds. Mild as the angelic guardians of the blest. Jane West. Milder than the Queen of Love. Theobald. Soft and mild as mothers to their erring babes. A. Hill. Mild as babes, and tender as their mothers, Banks. as infants newly rocked to sleep. Bevil Higgons. as sighing saints. A. Hill. Milder than a captive saint. Sir W. Davenant. as a maiden. Fraunce. as the voice that calmed the abyss upon creation's day, and breathed the breath of life upon the void of Chaos. G. Townsend. as orient day. W. Richardson. as opening gleams of promised heaven. Pope. Mild and fair as the morning sun. Caretv. as the sun of morn in earliest spring. Universal Magazine. as the even- ing sun. Ossian. like the hour of the setting sun. Ibid. as the departing sun. C. Churchill. as evening suns when flowery- footed May leads on the jocund hours. W. Thompson. He smiles as mild as evening suns, and gilds him with his favour. Ibid. as the summer sun's decaying light. Southey. as the MIL summer's evening ray. W. Heard. as the summer's evening hour. Author of Poem Fair Isabel of Coteliele. as the gentlest season of the year. Farvkes. Milder than the spring. W. Thompson. than the approach of spring. Ibid. Mild as blooming spring when budding flowers their fragrance bring. Lines by Author of Taliesin's Poem. Mild are his looks like opening spring. Ramsay. Milder than a vernal sky. Cawthorn. Mild as the vernal hours that ope the tender al- mond's blushing flowers. A. Servard. as the morn. Black- more, T. Gent, fy others. as opening morn. Moses Mendez. as ambrosial morn. Lines by Author of Taliesin's Poem. as the soft breathings of a vernal morn. W. Richardson. as April morn. R. Bloomjield. as the opening morn of May. Shenstone. as a May morning. T. Holcroft ; Play, Deaf fy Dumb.--as the orient dawn of May. W. Mason. as the dove- eyed morn awakes the May. Fenton. Milder than the blush- ing dawn. Somervile. Mild as the dawn of Aurora. Poem, Sor- rows of Love. Mild as the fragrance of Aurora's dawn, when vernal showers bedew the lilied lawn. Ibid. Mild and sweet like the fair summer evening. E. Young. Mild as when Phoebus sheds his soft effulgence on autumnal eve. Charles Emily as May. Banks, Pope,Sf others. as evening. Poetical Calendar. as evening skies. C. Shaw. Mild as streams the ethereal ra- diance from the brow of night's fair planet. W. Hodson. as the evening star whose shining ray, soft in the unruffled water seems to play. A. Seward. as Hesper's rays. H. Vaughan. More mild and lovely than the star of night, when through the azure vault she glides in peace serene, and bids our cares and sorrows cease. Translation of Charlemagne, a Poem by L. Bonaparte. Mild as the beam of night. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. as the softest beam of night. Play, Selim fy Zuleika. as the star- beam on the silent wave. A. Seward. as lambent glories that play around a sainted infant's head. Coleridge. as the summer air. Cornwall. as a summer's sky. /. Worsdale. as the gales of May. J. Macgilvray. as the breeze. Akenside. Milder than the mildest breeze that fans the bloom of spring. Pye. MO A Mild as April's dewy breeze. B. Hoole. Breezes, mild as love-inspiring May. Ibid. Mild as the soft breeze that fans the summer eve. Smollett. Milder than a summer's breeze. H. More. Mild and temperate as the summer's breeze. H. Smithers. Milder than the western breeze, tempering the summer's heat, and whispering through the trees. Poetical Miscellany. Mild as a southern breeze. J. Mottley. as the zephyr. Lovibond, Ashburnham, fy others. as the western ze- phyr's balmy breath. Universal Magazine. as Zephyrus' cool whispers be. W. Habington. as zephyr's whispering gale. The Shamrock, or Hibernian Cresses, a collection of poems. as when Zephyrus on Flora breathes. Milton. as the pleasantest zephyr that sheds and receives gentle odours from violet beds. John G. Cooper. Milder than the vernal gale. Ogilvie. Mild and harmonious as the breath of May, when evening gales o'er beds of roses play. H. Jones. as matin dew. T. Moore. as the dews which vernal clouds distil. T. Hogg. as the evening dew on earth descends. Universal Magazine. as descend the evening's dewy stores. Poems, by Author of Alfred. as the dew that cheers the drooping flowers. A. Sen>ard.-~as the vernal shower. R. Bloomjield. as summer shower, that falls at even- ing's fragrant hour, and wakes to life the languid flower. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. as the melodies at close of day, that heard remote along the vale decay. Beattie. as a summer sea. Dodsley's Collection. as happy lovers woo. J. Adams, inDryden's Miscellany. as a lamb. Sidney, Sylvester, fy others. as the bleating lamb. The Cloud King. as a dove. Durfey, J. Price. as the peaceful dove. F. Reynolds. Mild and in- offensive as the dove. Miscellany of Poems by J. Husbands. Milder than Paphian doves. Poetical Calendar, Mr. Greville. Mild as sleep. Jacob. as milk. W. Churchey. MISCHIEVOUS as a monkey. T. Shadwell, Colman. as an ape. T. Smollett. MOAN like a tender infant in its cradle, whose nurse has left it. Otway. MOD MODERN as the day. Play, Abdication of Ferdinand. MODEST as morn. A. Marvel. as the opening morn. Jane West. as the blushing morning. Duchess of Newcastle. as morning, when she coldly eyes the youthful Phoebus. Shake- spear. as infant Nature in her bloom. Pix. as justice. Play, Pericles. as an angel. /. Leanerd. as a nun. Poetical Ca- lendar, Stevenson. as virgins are. Poetical Recreations. as a vestal virgin's eye. Lilly. as a maid. E. Young. Modest and bashful as a virgin. Duchess of Newcastle. as the dove. Shakespear. In distant climes a plant there grows, Which from the touch its leaves will close, And trembling turn itself away If aught approach its fragile spray ; Its kindred plant they say abides Unseen our northern clime beneath, From ev'ry idle gaze it hides, And shrinks at ev'ry ruder breath ; Amid the snows it thrives the best Which guard the virgin's spotless breast. Tis Modesty ! a lovelier flow'r Than spring's first snow-drop born 'mid February's shower. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. MOMENTARY as a sound. Shakespear. Momentary and short like a flash of lightning, which vanisheth in the twinkling of an eye. Tillotson. MONSTROUS as the Gorgon prince of hell. Marlowe. MORTAL as the bolt in Jove's avenging hand. W. S. Landor. MOTIONLESS as death. Dry den, N. Rome. as rocks. Sir W. Scott. as a statue. Motteux, N. Rone, 8$ others. Pale and motionless as is a marble statue. /. Harris. Motionless as an image. T. Moore. as a stone. Arabian Nights Entertainments, C. Churchill. She stood motionless, like a terrified female in a storm, who hears the thunder roll on every side of her, and apprehends in every fresh peal the bolt which is to strike her M US dead. Sir W. Scott. Motionless as a sleeping babe she lay. Southey. MOVE like a god. Pope. like a goddess. Marmion. MOVELESS as a tower. Pope. as the centre. Watts. MOUNT upwards like a flame. Randolph. Mount as high as eagles soar. Marlowe. Mount and sing like a sky-lark. /. H. Stevenson. MOURN as a dove. Sacred Script., Sir W. Davenant, <^ others. like turtles. Sir W. Davenant. like a turtle that hath lost her mate. Sackville. Mourn for thee as a turtle for its mate. Play, Laughable Lover. In gentle murmurs will I mourn, as mourns the mate-forsaken dove. Jephtha, a sacred Drama. Mourn as the solitary lamb laments with plaintive cries its absent dam. Pohvheles Theocritus. MOURNFUL like the fair morning clad in misty fog. Spenser. as death. Cumberland. MOW down like autumn corn. Shakespear, W. Shirley. like the grass. A. Hill, Byron. MULTIPLY as doth a fish. Poolers Parnassus. Multiplied as the stars of heaven. Sacred Script. MULTITUDINOUS as the sands on the beach, or the motes in a sun-beam. Foote. MUNIFICENT as Nature. Massinger, W. Hayky. MURMUR like a swarm of bees. Chaucer. as with the sound of summer flies. W. Wordsworth. Murmuring as a fire that labours with the wind. Gary's Dante. Murmur like flames pent up, or like retiring seas. Addison. like a brook. Byron. like the noise of a falling stream. Fragments of Ancient Poetry. MUSICAL as Apollo's lute. Milton. Sweet and musical as bright Apollo's lute strung with his hair. Shakespear. More musical than the pipe of Hermes. Ibid. than the harp of Apollo. A. Hill. than is a syren's voice. Play, Cupid's M UT Whirligig. The Delian lute is not more musical than thy sweet voice. Play, Hector of Germany. His accents fell as evening echoes fall, each word as gentle and as musical. M. A. Browne, MUTABLE. More mutable than Proteus, or the moon. Syl- vester. than wind. Ibid. than fickle winds. Play, Spanish Tragedy. MUTE as a stone. Lidgate. as a statue. Middleton, fy Rowley. as Silence' self. F. Burney. as death. C. Churchill, G. Colman, fy others. Mute and pale as death itself. Beaumont $ Fletcher. as the dead. T. Moore. as the grave. A. Cowley. Mute as night, as silent and as secret. T. Heywood. as a fish. Fielding, Gay, fy others. as a mackarel. Foote, A. Mac- laren, others. as a mouse in a cheese, or a goose in a hay- rick, or a fish in a kettle. C. Gibber. as a bell without a clapper. T. Hokroft. N. J\AKED as truth. South, J. Beaumont's Psyche. as light. Montgomery. as unclouded light. Crown. as the day. Mickle's Lusiad. as a Mauritanian Moor. Green's Tu quoque. as a worm. Chaucer. I am left as naked as my nail. /. Palsgrave, T. Heywood, fy others. NARROW as a needle's eye. Sir W. Davenant, C. Shadwell. NATIVE as my blood. Jonson. NATURAL as the light. Netley Abbey, by Pearce. as sleep. Cumberland. as to breathe. South. as to breathe the air. /. Hervey. as for corn to bend under the ripened ear. H. Blair. as that leaves should fall in autumn, or that fruit should drop from the tree when it is fully ripe. Ibid. as for the autumnal leaf to change its hue. Ibid. as streams flow towards- the ocean. Akenside. as for fish to cleave the water. P. Pindar. Natural and easy as for fire to cast abroad a NIP flame. South. Natural to me as it is to a bird to fly, or a fish to swim. Play, Folly of Priestcraft. Shadows do not more naturally attend shining bodies, than envy pursues worth and merit. South. Naturally as pigs squeak. C. Butler. NAUSEOUS as are the fumes of smothering straw. E. Ward. NEAR as the confines of night and day. South. as the extremest ends of parallels. Shakespear. Near to me as branches to the tree whereon they grow. Cyril Turner. NEAT as a bridegroom. Marston. More neat and splendid than a virgin bride trimmed in her nuptial dresses. J. Smith. NECESSARY as sleep. Marston. Necessary for man's life as water, air, and fire. R. Edwards. NEEDLESS, as to bring an argument to prove that it is not midnight while the sun shines full in a man's face. South. NEW as the morn. W. Cartwright. as morning dew. Ibid. as day. Jonson. as peep of day. Duchess of Newcastle. NICE as ermines. Dryden. NIMBLE as the winged hours. R. Herrick. as x fiery elves. Poole's Parnassus. as the wind. Spenser, The Shamrock. Nimbler than air. Play, Honest Lawyer. Nimble as thought. Plays, Hoffman's Tragedy, King Saul; fy others. Fly nim- bler than the bolts of Jove. T. Rarvlins. Shoot through the air as nimbly as a star. Poole's Parnassus. More nimble than a dove, or empty eagles in their morning's flight. Sir W. Da~ venant. Nimble as a leopard. Sir P. Sidney. as a cat. II Trionfo delta Costanza. as a squirrel. T. Heyrvood, Sir W. Davenant. as the hare. Poetical Calendar. as a Lydian rabbit. A. Cowley. as an eel. J. Taylor, fy others. as quick- silver. G. Colman. as a sempster's needle. J. Lilly. Nim- bler than a tumbler. John Taylor. Nimble-fingered as a harper. Ibid. Sweet and nimble as the leaping juice of Crete. Sir W. Davenant. More nimbly than Vertumnus. Jonson. NIP me, as the bitter north-east wind doth check the tender blossoms in the spring. Play, Arden of Feversham. NOI NOISELESS as the light. C. Hopkins. as planets move. Sir W. Davenant. Let us make less noise than Time's soft feet, or planets when they move. Ibid. Noiseless as the falling dew. J. Wilson, Author of Isle of Palms. NOISY as the wind. Swift. like the noise of the sea. Sacred Script. like the rushing of many waters. Hid. NUMBERLESS as stars. Drayton, Cowley, fy others. as leaves on the oak. Shakespear. as sands. /. Banks. as the sand by the sea side. Sacred Script. Numberless and bright as crystal drops of morning dew. Psalms by Brady 8f Tate. NUMEROUS as glittering gems of morning dew. E. Young. More numerous than the dews on earth diffused from morn's prolific womb. /. Merrick. Numerous as dew-drops from the womb of morning. A. L. Aikin. as the stars. Banks, Durfey, fy others. as the stars of heaven. W. Rose. In number more than are the stars of night. Hoole's Ariosto. Numerous as the waves that break on the resounding shore. E. Young. as the sand. Duke. More numerous than the sands that bind the seas. C. Hopkins^ in Dryden's Miscellany. Numerous as the sands that crowd the shores, the barriers of the ocean. Pitt. Nor are in number more, the sands whereon the rolling billows roar. Poole's Parnassus. Numerous as the sands of fretful ocean. Thurlow. In number more than dust in fields, or sands along the shore. Pope. More than there are sands upon the Libyan shore. Poole's Parnassus. Numerous as shells by Neptune cast on shore. Garth. as autumn leaves, J. Ban- croft. Than autumn's ears far more, or leaves of trees, or sands on Neptune's shore. Poole's Parnassus. as leaves on trees, or sands upon the shore. Dryden, Pope. as leaves that tremble in the shady grove. E. Young. as leaves in forests strew the ground, when chiding autumn bids her gale resound. Preston's App. Rhodius. as bearded ears in fields. Dryden. as ears of standing corn, or leaves of trees. C. Hopkins. as olives on Palladian trees. Garth. as Hybla bees. Ibid. Not Hybla's mountains in the jocund prime, upon her many OLD bushes of sweet thyme, show greater numbers of industrious bees. Poole's Parnassus. O. OBDURATE as a rock. Byron. as a rock of adamant. Glap- thorne. as the grave. Goring. as brass. Quarles. OBEDIENT as Abraham. Barclay. Obedient to all his mo- tions as a puppet moved by wires. John Baillie. OBSCURE, as doth a cloud the sun's bright shining rays. Harington. More obscure than darkness. T. Heywood. Ob- scure as hell. R. Hurst. OBSTINATE as a mule. Poetical Calendar, Joseph Reed, $ others. as an idiot. C. Johnson. OBTRUSIVE as the air. John Bidlake. OBVIOUS. Proofs, plain and obvious as the light. Play, Zelmane. ODIOUS as comparisons. Shakespear. Odious and despicable as a wicked old man. South. More odious to your sight than toads and adders. Dry den. More odious to me than foul weather on a May day. Otivay. ODORIFEROUS. More odoriferous than balm. Play, Hoff- man's Tragedy. ODOROUS as incense gathering in the skies. Savage. The Arabian wind, whose breathing gently blows purple to the violet, blushes to the rose, did never yield an odour rich as this. W. Habington. OLD as Time. A. Behn, T. Scot, fy others. as Sybilla. Haring- ton, Shakespear. as Nestor. Play, How to choose a good Wife. as a weather-beaten conduit of many kings' reigns. Shake- spear. Old and grey as winter. T. Killigren. It is as old as Adam, and bears date with human nature itself. South. Old-fashioned as if tutored in the ark. P. Pindar. K OMI OMINOUS as the looks of Medusa. Marmion. ONWARD they came like summer wave that dances to the shore. Sir W. Scott. OPEN as the day. South, Watts, $ others. A hand open as day for melting charity. Shakespear. Open and generous as the teeming season that crowns the labours of the various year. W. Hett. Open as day-light. A. Hill. Charity, open and free as light, or element. The Saviour, a Poem. His eye is open as the morning's. Sir John Denham. Open as the sun in his high meridian at noon-day. R. Nevile. as a shadeless sky. Landon. To open like a fragrant bud before the morn- ing's eye. Sir W. Davenant. Open as roses at the gentle aspect of the sun. /. Corye. OPPOSITE as yea and nay. Quarles. as black and purest white. Ibid. Light and darkness are not more opposite to one another, than the holy nature of God is to sin. Tillotson. Opposed as darkness to the light of heaven. Pollok. ORIENT as the day. Thurlow. The brightest of the stars was not so orient as her crystal eyes. R. Green. as the pearl. Lilly. OVERFLOW like sudden floods. Howard fy Dryden's Indian Queen. like a mighty deluge. Tillotson like to the raging foam. Play, Youth's Comedy. OVERPOWERING as when Jove's planet, distant and alone, flashes from out the sultry summer sky, and bids each lesser star give up its place. Cornwall. OVERTAKE us with more speed than falling torrents, or the swiftest tide. Banks. OUTRAGEOUS as a sea. Milton, T. Bayly. as a mother bear. Dryden. OUTSHINE as a sunbeam does a lamp. /. Ford. as the moon does a star. Ibid. Outshine her as the sun a star. Play, Querer por Querer. Outshine as far as Sol in light outshines PAL a star. T. Ward. It outshone his golden orb as far as his full blaze outshines the twinkling star. Hayley. OUTSTRIP all kings as far as doth the sun obscure a little star. John, Taylor. Far swifter than the nimble lightning's flash out- strips the sluggish thunder peal that follows it. G. Colman,jun. P. Jr ALE as death. Play, Hoffman's Tragedy, Corvley, fy others. as the cheeks of death. Akenside. as the cheek faded by sorrow. London. Pale and wan as death. Gildon. His looks are pale and languid as if death had seized him. E. Ward. Pale and livid as the countenance of death. E. Carter, in the Rambler. Pale as a corpse. Mirandola, Scott, fy others. as the withering tenants of the tomb. Ogilvie as a ghost. C. Hopkins, F. Rey- nolds, fy others. as a tormented ghost. Chaucer. as the ghost that by the gleaming moon withdraws the curtain of the mur- derer's bed. W. J. Mickle. as a spectre on the Stygian coast. Mickle's Lusiad. as a spirit who is surprised by sun-rise. Sir W. Scott. as a man long unslept. Chaucer. like a man awaked from a swoon. Lidgate. as a pensive cloistered nun. Charlotte Smith. Paler than guilt. T. Yalden, in Dryden's Miscellany. Pale as the waning moon. Penrose. as the moon before the solar ray. S. Boyse. Cheek, pale as is the moon's chaste lustre. C. A. Elton. as the colours of the lunar bow. John Home. as Cynthia's rays. C. Johnson. as the last star that fades before the day-break. Landon. as fires when mas- tered by the light. Dryden. as a lily. Duchess of Newcastle ; Play, Fatal Union ; Sf others. as the snowy skin of lily leaves. Sir W. Davenant. as modest lily of the vale. Poem, The Union of the Roses. as a snowdrop. Byron. as droop- ing snowdrops. Walwyn. Paler than the hue of snowdrops trembling to the chilly gale. Mickle 's Lusiad. Pale as a prim- rose. Shakespear. as horse-radish. Mrs. Cowley. as a stick of horse-radish. Play, Midnight Wanderer, by Pearce. as a K2 PAL parsnip. Morton. as alabaster. Byron. as marble. L. Mac- nally, H. Downing. as marble o'er the tomb. L. Macnally. as monumental marble. Byron, Southey. as sepulchral marble. Southey. Paler and colder than the marble bust. London. Like sculptured marble, pale and cold. Poem, Ellen Fitzarthur. Pale as marble columns. Cornwall. as a statue. Play, Alonzo. as a statue in an abbey chapel. Durfey. You look paler than one of these white statues. R. Shiel. Pale as a statue bending o'er a tomb. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as clay. Sir W. Scott. as the moon in her first quarter. Ibid. An outline pale and indistinct as that of the moon when the winter morning is far advanced. Ibid. Pale as ashes. Gascoigne, Spenser, fy others. Pale and wan as ashes was his look. Spenser. Pale as lead. Chaucer, Sackville, fy others. like April morn. Ramsay. Pale like April morn clad in a wintry cloud. Ballad, William fy Margaret. like the morning's sun rising over misty hills. Play, Codrus. as milk. Shakespear. as box. Chaucer, G. Sandys. as a sheet. M. P. Andrews. -as a sheet of white paper. Colman. as a piece of chalk. J. Bickerstaff. Paler than the snow. Shake- spear, Lee. Pale as snowy Appenines. W. Sampson. Pale and pure as moon-light snows. Landon. Pale as winter moon- light. Theobald. as the ice-incrusted streams beneath the cold moon's trembling gleams. A. Servard. as the watery cloud. A. Dow. as a watery cloud that seems to spread, slow rising from a lake. W. Churchey. as the pale ocean on a sunless morn. Southey. PALL on her temper like a twice-told tale. Akenside. PANT after him as the hart panteth after the water-brooks. Sacred Script. Panting like the smitten deer. Gay. PASS away like a shadow. Wisdom of Solomon. Pass like a shadow on the wall. Chaucer. Pass away like a summer's shade. Spenser. like summer clouds. C. Fox. like clouds before the sun. Quarks. Pass away like clouds before the up- rising sun. Cumberland. like smoke. H. Blair like smoke PER before the wind. Quarles. like a vapour. Mrs. Coivley. like gentle winds over the standing corn. T. Cooke. Pass away like a summer breeze. Mrs. Hemans. like April showers over a field. E. Young. like the pageant of a day. H. Blair. as a winter's tale by the fire-side. E. Young. Pass through the difficulties with more ease than a bullet passeth through the thin air, or a man would pass through a net of cobweb. Tillotson. PASSABLE as air. Sir W. Davenant, Dryden, fy others. PASSIVE as a stone. Montgomery. like a ship to the violence of the waves. H. Blair. Her disposition was passive to in- struction's breath, as vernal buds to Zephyr's soothing gale. T. Hull, PATIENT as Job. Barclay, Shakespear, fy others. as the dove. Charlotte Charke. as the female dove. SJiakespear. as the tortoise. N. Tate. as the midnight sleep. Shakespear. as a gentle stream. Ibid. as the spirit of a saint dying and leaving all the world behind him. Banks. PEACEABLE as sleep. Beaumont $ Fletcher. as spotless in- nocence. Play, Maid's Tragedy. PEACEFUL as a calm. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as the dead. Sotheby's Oberon. as a sleeping child. M. A. Browne. Peace- ful and harmless as the dove. E. Ward. PEEVISH as children waked. T. Shipman. as a child who has lost its plaything. John Baillie. as a sick monkey. L. Machin. PELLUCID as glass. R. Nevile. PEREMPTORY as wrathful planets, death, or destiny. Marloive. PERFECT as circles. Donne. PERFIDIOUS as the seas or winds. Beaumont $ Fletcher, T. Better ton. PERFUME the air with incense richer than the phoenix' funeral pile. T. Nabbs. Perfume my chamber like the phcenix' nest. Behn. Perfumed as the phoenix' nest. Play, Marriage Broker. PER Perfumed, as if Arabian winds scattered their spices loosely on [the face of some rich earth fruitful with aromates. Nabbs. Yield a more precious breath than that which moves the whis- pering leaves in the Panchaian groves. Habington. A thousand dew-drops gemm'd their bed, And Heaven's wide cope stretch'd o'er their head ; Their curtain the white thorn of May Shedding its blossoms, as the spray Trembled beneath the Zephyr's sway : And ne'er did golden censer fling On velvet couch of slumb'ring king Such perfumes as that Zephyr's wing. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. PERISH like a hasty blossom cropt by the setting winter. Peaps. like flowers. Landon, like fleeting exhalations found no more. W. Corvper. PERSPICUOUS. The purpose is perspicuous even as sub- stance. Shakespear. PERSUADE. You may as soon persuade that snow, the inno- cent fleece of heaven that is borne upon the fleet wings of some sportive wind, is Ethiop's wool, as call this truth. /. Shirley. PERSUASIVE as reason. A. Pasquin. PERT as a pearmonger. Gay. as a pyet. Sir W. Scott. as an unhooded hawk. W. Taverner. PERVERSE as a hog. Smollett. PERVIOUS as the air. Battle of Talavera, a Poem. PETRIFIED. Stand petrified like Lot's wife. The Robbers, a Play from Schiller. PIERCE like lightning. Glapthorne, T. Heyrvood, fy others. like quick lightning from the stormy skies. Sir W. Killigrerv. like a pointed dart. Watts. Piercing as the mid-day sun. Shakespear. as light. Duchess of Newcastle, Dryden's Mis- cellany. as light from heaven. A. Hill. More piercing than PL A the darts that break from burning exhalations' power. Play, King John. Piercing as the point of a needle. Pierce Plow- man's Vision. Eye, piercing as a needle. C. Shadwell. like lynx's eyes. Play, Locrine. PINE. So pines the turtle in the lonely grove, Robb'd by the spoiler of her mated love ; In vain the doves of finest plume and voice, Court the poor mourner to another choice ; From spray to spray with drooping wings she flies, Bemoans her fate, and solitary dies. Sturmy. PITEOUS as looks the mother on her lowly babe, when death doth close his tender dying eyes. Shakespear. PITILESS as death. Dryden. as a storm. Spenser. as fire. Play, Different Widows. PITY such as tender parents feel. Watts. PLACID as an infant's rest. W. Richardson ; Play, Indians. PLAGUE. I will plague him worse than Moses did the Egypti- ans. T. Holcroft. PLAIN as truth. Beaumont fy Fletcher, Marston. It is evident ; plain as the light that shines. Play, Fond Lady. Plain as the sun. Durfey, Parnell. as day. N. Lee. as the noon-day. Tillotson. The case seems plain as on your face your nose is. Sir W. Davenant. Plain as the nose on a man's face. Quevedo translated; Play, Momus turned Fabulist. as noses upon faces. C. Butler. as the nose on my face. Colman. Plain, easy, and intelligible as that two and two make four. South. More plain than dull simplicity. Dryden's Troilus. Plain as way to parish church. Shakespear. Plain as a pack-staff. Greene's Arcadia, Foote. as a pike-staff. Gay, J. Sturmy, 8f others. PLAINTIVE. She pours her melancholy forth as sweetly plaintive, as when Philomel beneath some poplar shade bemoans her young. Murphy. PLAY like bird in bush. Sylvester. PL A PLAYFUL as the sportive kitten. P. Pindar. as a lamb. Play, Barber of Seville. as the fawn. Haverhill, a Poem by John Webb. as the God of Love. Shepherd's Lottery. PLEASANT as sleep after toil. Spenser. as ease after war. Ibid. as the light. A. Cowley. as returning light. Ramsay. Pleasanter to me than to behold the jocund month* of May, in whose green head of youth the amorous Flora shows her various flowers. J. Kirk. Pleasant as the morning dews that fall on Zion's hill. Watts. as the calm dew of the morning. Ossian. as the shower of the morning. Ibid. as the shower of spring, when it softens the branch of the oak, and the young leaf rears its green head. Ibid. as the calm shower of spring, when the sun looks on the field, and the light cloud flies over the hills. Ibid. as the shower which falls on the sunny field. Ibid. as the spring. Duchess of Newcastle. as the odorous month of May. C. Cotton. as the breath of evening. Poem, Margaret of Anjou. as the gale of spring. Ossian. as the gale of the hill. Ibid. as a summer's evening. Duchess of New- castle. as Elysium. E. Young. Pleasant to me as Paradise was to Adam the first day of his creation. Marlowe, W. Mount- fort. Pleasant and mournful like the memory of joys that are past. Ossian. Speech more pleasant than sweet harmony. Marlowe. Pleasant as the light of the morning when the sun riseth, even as a morning without clouds. Sacred Script, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land. Ibid. Pleasant, fresh, and clear, as when the last of April offers to sweet May the pride and glory of the youthful spring. /. Kirk. as the sweet South that breathes upon a bank of violets, stealing and giving odour. Shakes-pear. as to escape the chain of hard constraint. Potter's Eschylus. PLEASE like the choristers of air when first they hail the ap- proach of laughing May. 7. Warton, in Dodsley's Collection. PLEASING as the day. Poetical Recreations. as dawn of day. Gildon. as light to the eyes. Atterbury. as the rosy morn whose lovely cheeks look smiling on the day. W. Hemings. PON Pleasing and gay as the sweet smiling summer. W, Hett. More pleasing than a summer's morn. J. Clare. Pleasing as sunshine to the bee. Gay. as winter suns or summer shade. Dryden. Pleasing to my sense as sleep after a tedious watch- ing. Glapthorne. as dreams of health to the diseased. Jacob. as the pipe of Mercury which charmed the hundred eyes of watchful Argus, and enforced him to sleep. Play, Leir. as hope. Play, Momus turned Fabulist. as hope to the despair- ing penitent. Jacob. PLENTY as rabbits in a warren. Fielding. as blackberries. Centlivre, Sir W. Scott. as nettles. Play, Plymouth in an Uproar. as hops. M. P. Andrews. PLIABLE as an ozier. Lacy, J. Worsdale. as a twig. W. Davies. PLIANT as a hazel stick. Play, Interlude of Youth. as the shoots of a young tree in vernal flower. T. Moore. More pliant than wax. John Baillie. PLUMP as a partridge. E. Ravenscroft, Pope, $ others. Plump and shy as a partridge. Sir W. Scott. Plump as barn-door chicken. P. Pindar. as a puffin. Farquhar. as a cherry. Herrick. as grapes. T. Killigrerv ; Play, Psyche. as grapes after showers. Behn. Plump and grey as a gooseberry. R. Burns. Plump and juicy as a damson. E. Ward. Plump as stalled theology. E. Young. POINT to him as naturally as the needle to the north. Young Hypocrite, in Foote's Comic Theatre. Pointed at as a prodigy. Rawlins. Sharply pointed as a thorn. Herrick. POISON like a scorpion's dart. Beattie. POISONOUS as the serpent. Mirandola. as an aspic's tooth. Moses Mendez. POLISHED as marble. E. Young. POLITE as elegance. Savage. PONDEROUS. More ponderous than the sand that lies upon the new forsaken shore. Quarles. POO POOR as Job. Shakespear, Armin, 8f others. as Job, an alche- mist, or a poet. Marston. Poor and loathsome as was leprous Job. Play, Three English Brothers. Poor as the beggar Irus. Massinger. as Cincinnatus. Thomson. Poorer than naked Poverty. Beaumont's Psyche. Poor as a miser. Byron. as winter. Shakespear. as a church mouse. T. Durfey, S. Foote, 8$ others. as a starved herring. M. P. Andrews. PORTENTOUS as the written wall which struck o'er midnight bowls the proud Assyrian pale. E. Young. POSITIVE. It is as positive as the earth is firm. Shakespear. POTENT as whirlwinds. H. Boyd. as the breath of fate. Marston. POUNCE. Kindle at the danger, and like the eagle in the midst of storms thus pounce upon his prey. Garrick. POUR like a deluge. Dryden, Lillo. Pour as a flood. Smollett, Sir W.Scott. Pour down like a flood from the hills. Somervile. Pour on us like a flood of light. Lloyd on Churchill. Pour upon him like rain. Byron. Pour down like winter rain. Landon. POWERFUL as death. Bronm. as the voice of Fate. Marston. as the sun shining in meridian strength. Montgomery. as Medea's drugs. Tomkis. PRATTLE more incessant than a jay. M. Pilkington. like parrots. E. Ward. PRECARIOUS as the cast of a dye. Centlivre. PRECIOUS as the dew the amorous bounty of the morn casts on the rose's cheek. Glapthorne. More precious than gold. Lidgate. Precious and rare as Ophir's golden ore. Blackmore. More precious to my heart than life or freedom. W. Hayley, than the plank thrown to the drowning wretch. Dr. John Browne. Precious as my soul. Sir W. Davenant. More pre- cious than the vital founts that play within my heart. Andrew Beckett. Precious as Eriphyle's bracelet. T. Jordan. More precious than the Egyptian pearl. M. R. Mitford. PUB PREGNANT as vernal buds. L. Theobald. PRESAGE. Like a comet with portentous blaze of threatening beauty shine, and armed with fate presage destruction and the fall of kings. Bevil Higgons. Presaging famine, pestilence, and war, like an autumnal ruddy streaming star. Sylvester. PRESUPPOSE as naturally as the consequent does the antece- dent. South. PREY on itself, like monsters of the deep. SJiakespear. PRIVATE. Kept private as religious rites from the unhallowed view of common eyes. Otrvay. PRIZE your honour more than life or human happiness. Play, Valiant Welshman. PRODUCTIVE as the sun. Pope, Sheffield Duke of Buckingham. PROFITABLE as autumn's harvest. Duchess of Newcastle. PROFOUND as reason. Savage. as hell. Swift. I have dived in horrors as profound as hell. Play, Ungrateful Favorite. Profound as the sea. Sir W. Davenant, Higgons. PROGRESSIVE as a stream. W. Comper. PROMPT. I am prompt as lightning to your service. N. Tote. PROPORTION. Bears no more proportion to it, than finite does to infinite, or than temporal to eternal. Tillotson. PROSTRATE as earth. T. Heyivood.]ike summer's corn by tempests lodged. Shafcespear. PROUD as Lucifer. Chaucer, Barclay, fy others. as prince in pall. Chaucer. as any great Mogul. Somervile. as the Turk- ish Soldan. Poetical Calendar. as a beauty. C. Gibber. as the lady of a new made lord. P. Pindar. as May. Jonson. as a peacock. Chaucer; Play,Appiusfy Virginia ;$ others. Proud and pert as a pie. Chaucer. Pert and proud as any popinjay. Sir W. Scott. PROWL like hungry wolves. R. Hamilton. PUBLIC as the air, and noon-day sun. A. Servard. PUN PUNCTUAL as the sun to time. A. Hill. as a tertian ague. Play, Braggadocio. PUNY as pigmies. E. Ward. PURE as innocence. Dekker, W. Hemings, 8f others. Pure and fresh as innocence. Byron. as unblemished innocence. T. Heymood. as angel innocence. Jane West. as maiden in- nocence. W. Mason. as the thoughts of infant innocence. .Dr. Johnson. as virtue. T. Durfey.- as infant goodness. Thomson. as infant chastity. R. Bloomfield. as heaven. Greatheed, Hunt, fy others. More pure than are the heavens. Marmion. Pure as purity. Mirandola. as grace. Shakespear. as sanctity. Byron. as sanctity's best shrine. T. Middleton. as truth. Mallet, Cumberland. as holy truth. Play, Fatal Falsehood. as vestal truth. Thomson. as friendship. Mal- let. Pure, simple, and unmixed, as sincerity. South. Pure and innocent as the thoughts of dying saints. A. Corvley. as spotless saints. H. More. More pure than sainted spirits journeying to the sky. Mary Robinson. Prayers, as pure and free from earthly thought, as e'er found passage through the strict gate of heaven. T. Randolph. Pure and spotless as a soul in heaven. Crown. Pure as angels. H. Donning; J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. Free and pure from all un- chastity as angels are of sin. Duchess of Newcastle. Pure as the spotless seraph. R. Shiel. as the first created mortals who in the world's prime innocence began. Banks. Pure like a vestal. J. H. Stevenson. as the white livery worn by angels in their Maker's sight. Dekker. Pure and white as angels' soft desires. Farquhar. Pure and enlightened as a spirit. J. H. Stevenson. Pure as a blessed spirit. Sir W. Scott. as a new baptized soul. F. Beaumont. as infancy. T. Holcroft. as an infant's thoughts. Southey. as an infant's dreams or an- gel's wishes. Fatal Falsehood, a Tragedy. as infant's sleep. Beaumont fy Fletcher. as an infant's breath. J. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms ; Milman. as a maiden. Interlude, Nature, by Henry Medwall. as light. Dryden, Play, Sulieman ; 8f others. PUR as unshaded light. G. E. Howard. as first created light. Sir W. Davenant. as light first streaming from the heights of heaven. P. Francis. as the effulgence of ethereal light. W. Richardson. as morning light. Chatterton. Pure and ex- haustless as the solar blaze. Miss Porden. Pure and spotless as the solar beam. Rome, a Poem. Pure as the sun's beams. Alexander Earl of Sterline, Machin. as the brightest beams shot from the sun at his full height. Poolers Parnassus. as heaven's ethereal beam. Universal Magazine. as the light of heaven's ethereal ray. Poem, Paradise of Coquettes. Pure and fiery as Phoebus' beams. Marlowe. The morning's orient beam is not more pure, more stainless than my truth. D. Mallet. Pure as the light of a celestial ray. Pomfret. Purer than the day. /. Beaumont. Pure as the day spring. G. Townsend. as the naked heavens. Wordsworth. Pure and serene as the blue depths of heaven. /. Wilson, author of Isle of Palms. as the lightning's livid ray. Anon. Translation of Anacreon. I know thee pure even as the lights of heaven. W. Richardson. Pure as fixed stars. Pomfret. Shall pure as the day-star burn. Lower. Pure as the young moon's coronet. T. Moore. as the moon's chaste beam. M.R. Mitford. as fire. Johnson, Marlowe, fy others. Pure and clear like the celestial fires. Moliere, Berwick edit. 1771. Pure and ra- diant as celestial fire. J. Bird. My love is as pure to you and as free from blemish, as is the element of fire, or the white robe of innocence. A. Brome. Pure as the vestal fire. Drayton, Dilke, fy others. as vestal flames. Mountford, Pix. A flame as pure as that which burns on holy Vesta's altars. Fountain. Pure, chaste, and lasting, as fair Vesta's flame. C. Johnson. My love to you is as pure as the flame that burns upon an altar. Shadnell. Pure as celestial flame. G. Walker. as the flame that warms an angel's breast. The Saviour, a Poem. as the morning. W. Wordsworth. as early morn. G. Townsend. as the blush of the first morn. Ibid. as the un- tainted breath of morn. Mrs. Brookes. as morning's dew. Elys Cossack. Pure and fair as dew-drops. Pollok. Pure Wf nWc4Ltut? ' Vt^a^WiUr